University Of Iowa Performs State’s First Robotic Living kidney Donation Surgery
USA: The University of Iowa this week completed the first robotic removal of a kidney from a living donor in the state, a procedure that allowed the organ to be transplanted to a patient on the waiting list. The operation marks a milestone for minimally invasive transplant surgery in Iowa and represents a new option for donors and recipients.
Surgeons involved say the robotic platform provides greater precision than traditional laparoscopic approaches, improving the safety and effectiveness of donor nephrectomy. The team noted the technique can reduce trauma to tissues and may shorten recovery times for living donors while preserving transplant outcomes for recipients.
The Iowa Donor Network reports nearly 600 people in the state are awaiting an organ transplant, with roughly 90% of those candidates in need of a kidney. Clinicians and transplant program leaders say wider adoption of robotic procedures could expand living donation and help address the state’s kidney shortage by making donation less invasive and more accessible.
While robotic donation is not yet standard practice, surgeons expect uptake to grow as more clinicians—especially newer surgeons trained on robots—gain experience. One team member outlined plans to move toward robot-assisted implantation in the near future, a step that could further transform kidney transplantation across Iowa.
Video originally published on 2026-03-23 13:10:25
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