Department of Pathology and Diagnostics University and Hospital Trust of Verona Verona Italy General Surgery and Liver Transplant Unit University and Hospital Trust of Verona Verona Italy General Surgery Unit ULSS1 Dolomiti Hospital of Feltre Feltre Italy Division of General and Transplant Surgery University of Pisa Pisa Italy Surgical Pathology and Cytopathology UnitDepartment of Medicine University and Hospital Trust of Padua Padua Italy Institute of Histopathology and Molecular Diagnosis Careggi University Hospital Florence Italy Pathology Unit Sant'Orsola-Malpighi University Hospital of Bologna Bologna Italy National Health Institute Rome Italy National Transplant Center Rome Italy University Hospital Birmingham Birmingham United Kingdom.
Liver Transpl. 2021 Jan;27(1):55-66. doi: 10.1002/lt.25858. Epub 2020 Sep 15.
The risk of transmission of malignancy from donor to recipient is low. However, this occurrence has dramatic consequences. Many reports of donor-derived cancers in liver transplant recipients have been published, but they have not been systematically summarized into a lucid and unified analysis. The present study is an attempt to provide clarity to this unusual but clinically important problem. We systematically reviewed all patient reports, patient series, and registries published on cancer transmission events through the end of December 2019. We identified a total of 67 publications with 92 transmission events. The most frequently transmitted cancers were lymphomas (30; 32.6%), melanomas (8; 8.7%), and neuroendocrine tumors (8; 8.7%). Most of the melanomas were metastasizing, whereas most of the lymphomas were localized to the graft. The median time to cancer diagnosis after transplantation was 7 months, with 78.1% of diagnoses established in the first year. Melanoma carried the worst prognosis, with no recipients alive at 1 year after cancer diagnosis. Lymphoma recipients had a better outcome, with more than 75% surviving at 2 years. A metastatic cancer carries a worse prognosis for recipients, and recipients with localized cancer can benefit from the chance to undergo transplantation again. The findings confirm the need to pay attention to donors with a history of melanoma but also suggest the need for a more careful evaluation of groups of donors, such as those dying from cerebral hemorrhage. Finally, recipients of organs from donors with cancer should be carefully followed to detect potential transmission.
从供体向受者传播恶性肿瘤的风险较低。然而,这种情况会产生戏剧性的后果。已经有许多关于肝移植受者中供体来源的癌症的报道,但尚未对其进行系统地总结为清晰统一的分析。本研究旨在为这一不常见但具有重要临床意义的问题提供清晰的认识。我们系统地回顾了截至 2019 年 12 月底发表的所有关于癌症传播事件的患者报告、患者系列和登记处。我们共确定了 67 篇文献,其中有 92 个传播事件。最常传播的癌症是淋巴瘤(30 例;32.6%)、黑色素瘤(8 例;8.7%)和神经内分泌肿瘤(8 例;8.7%)。大多数黑色素瘤是转移性的,而大多数淋巴瘤局限于移植物。移植后诊断癌症的中位时间为 7 个月,78.1%的诊断在第一年确定。黑色素瘤的预后最差,诊断后 1 年内无受者存活。淋巴瘤受者的预后较好,超过 75%的患者在 2 年内存活。转移性癌症对受者的预后较差,而局部癌症的受者可以从再次接受移植的机会中受益。这些发现证实了需要关注有黑色素瘤病史的供者,但也表明需要对某些供者群体,如因脑出血而死亡的供者群体,进行更仔细的评估。最后,应仔细随访接受癌症供体器官的受者,以检测潜在的传播。