AEGiS-AP: Activist Larry Kramer Leaves ICU Associated PressImportant note: Information in this article was accurate in 2001. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
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Activist Larry Kramer Leaves ICU

Associated Press - Wednesday December 26, 2001


PITTSBURGH (AP) - Five days after undergoing a liver transplant, AIDS activist and author Larry Kramer's condition was upgraded to fair on Wednesday and he was moved from intensive care.

A spokeswoman at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center said Kramer was moved to a private room in the liver transplant inpatient unit and that he was able to walk a bit. His doctors have said his condition was progressing as expected.

Kramer, 66, spent seven months on the organ transplant waiting list. He moved to Pittsburgh in early November to wait for an organ to become available, and underwent transplant surgery Friday.

While many transplant centers oppose the surgery for HIV-positive patients, UPMC's Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute has performed 10 liver transplants on HIV-positive patients since 1997. Eight of the patients have survived.

Kramer's HIV has been relatively well controlled, but he suffered from end-stage liver failure caused by hepatitis B.

Kramer is the author of the plays "The Normal Heart" and "The Destiny of Me," and books about the front line of AIDS and gay activism. His screenplay for the 1969 film "Women in Love" was nominated for an Academy Award. He also helped found Gay Men's Health Crisis, which provides services to people with AIDS, and later helped create ACT UP, an AIDS advocacy group.
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