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Organ
Transplants May Carry Cancer Danger
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- AP
Organ Transplants May Carry Cancer Danger Sun Apr 6, 2:42 PM ET Add Science - AP to My Yahoo! By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - Five patients who developed skin cancer after an organ transplant may have received cancer seed cells from the donor, researchers report.
The cancer, Kaposi's sarcoma, is caused
by a virus that the body usually can eliminate. It has become associated
with the AIDS (news - web sites) epidemic because the virus affects people
with weakened immune systems.
Kaposi's sarcoma appears in about one out
of every 200 transplant recipients — 400 to 500 times the rate of the general
population. It had been thought the virus was able to take hold in these
patients because their immune systems were suppressed to prevent rejection
of the new organ.
But a European research team has found
evidence that, at least in some transplant patients, seed cells for the
cancer tumors seem to have originated in the organ donor.
The findings of the team led by Patrizia
Barozzi and Mario Luppi of the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia in
Modena, Italy, are reported in Monday's online issue of the journal Nature
Medicine.
The study shows that "tumor cells from
the organ donor can contribute to one of the most frequent transplant-related
malignancies," Patrick S. Moore of the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute said in an accompanying article. He was not part of the research
team.
Weeks ago, Scottish doctors reported on
two cases of patients developing the skin cancer melanoma from transplanted
kidneys even though the donor was successfully treated for the cancer many
years earlier.
Transfer of cancer from a donated organ
to a transplant patient is rare, and the chances of it happening long after
the donor was treated were thought to be extremely unlikely.
In the cases involving Kaposi's sarcoma,
researchers studied eight patients — six women and two men — who received
kidneys from male donors and who developed Kaposi's sarcoma nine months
to 40 months later.
In analyzing the cancer cells from the
women, the researchers detected Y-chromosome DNA in four cases. DNA is
the molecule that determines a human's development. Women have two X-chromosomes
while men have one X- and one Y-chromosome. Thus, the presence of the Y-chromosome
DNA in the women's cancer indicates that the cells originated with a male.
There was no evidence of Y-chromosomes
in the cancer in the other two women or in normal cells from any of the
women.
Using DNA analysis of the cancer cells
in the men, the researchers found that in one case the cancer DNA was related
to that of the donor.
Kaposi's sarcoma can be treated by reducing
or ending the suppression of the patient's immune system, allowing it to
battle the cancer. That also can mean the immune system attacks the transplanted
organ, causing it to be rejected.
Moore noted that the organ donors had no
symptoms of Kaposi's sarcoma, which suggests they are infected with the
cancer-causing virus but that their bodies destroy the cancer cells when
they form. Once the infected organ is transplanted into someone with a
weakened immune system, however, the cancer cells can grow and cause disease.
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