| Literature DB >> 32976703 |
David P Al-Adra1, Laura Hammel2, John Roberts3, E Steve Woodle4, Deborah Levine5, Didier Mandelbrot6, Elizabeth Verna7, Jayme Locke8, Jonathan D'Cunha9, Maryjane Farr7, Deirdre Sawinski10, Piyush K Agarwal11, Jennifer Plichta12, Sandhya Pruthi13, Deborah Farr14, Richard Carvajal7, John Walker15, Fiona Zwald16, Thomas Habermann17, Morie Gertz17, Philip Bierman18, Don S Dizon19, Carrie Langstraat20, Talal Al-Qaoud1, Scott Eggener11, John P Richgels11, George J Chang21, Cristina Geltzeiler1, Gonzalo Sapisochin22, Rocco Ricciardi23, Alexander S Krupnick24, Cassie Kennedy13, Nisha Mohindra25, David P Foley1, Kymberly D Watt13.
Abstract
Patients undergoing evaluation for solid organ transplantation (SOT) frequently have a history of malignancy. Only patients with treated cancer are considered for SOT but the benefits of transplantation need to be balanced against the risk of tumor recurrence, taking into consideration the potential effects of immunosuppression. Prior guidelines on timing to transplant in patients with a prior treated malignancy do not account for current staging, disease biology, or advances in cancer treatments. To update these recommendations, the American Society of Transplantation (AST) facilitated a consensus workshop to comprehensively review contemporary literature regarding cancer therapies, cancer stage specific prognosis, the kinetics of cancer recurrence, as well as the limited data on the effects of immunosuppression on cancer-specific outcomes. This document contains prognosis, treatment, and transplant recommendations for melanoma and hematological malignancies. Given the limited data regarding the risk of cancer recurrence in transplant recipients, the goal of the AST-sponsored conference and the consensus documents produced are to provide expert opinion recommendations that help in the evaluation of patients with a history of a pretransplant malignancy for transplant candidacy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer/malignancy/neoplasia; clinical research/practice; editorial/personal viewpoint; organ transplantation in general; patient safety; recipient selection
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32976703 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.16324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086