Skin cancer is the most common malignancy affecting solid organ transplant recipients (SOTR), and SOTR experience increased skin cancerassociated morbidity and mortality. There are no formal multidisciplinary guidelines for skin cancer screening after transplant, and current practices are widely variable. We conducted three rounds of Delphi method surveys with a panel of 84 U.S. dermatologists and transplant physicians to establish skin cancer screening recommendations for SOTR. The transplant team should risk stratify SOTR for screening, and dermatologists should perform skin cancer screening by full-body skin examination. SOTR with a history of skin cancer should continue regular follow-up with dermatology for skin cancer surveillance. High-risk transplant patients include thoracic organ recipients, SOTR age 50 and above, and male SOTR. High-risk Caucasian patients should be screened within 2 years after transplant, all Caucasian, Asian, Hispanic, and high-risk African American patients should be screened within 5 years after transplant. No consensus was reached regarding screening for low-risk African American SOTR. We propose a standardized approach to skin cancer screening in SOTR based on multidisciplinary expert consensus. These guidelines prioritize and emphasize the need for screening for SOTR at greatest risk for skin cancer. ª 2019 Steunstichting ESOT
Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) is a key clinical and research tool in lung transplantation (LTx). However, BAL collection and processing are not standardized across LTx centers. This International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation–supported consensus document on BAL standardization aims to clarify definitions and propose common approaches to improve clinical and research practice standards. The following 9 areas are covered: (1) bronchoscopy procedure and BAL collection, (2) sample handling, (3) sample processing for microbiology, (4) cytology, (5) research, (6) microbiome, (7) sample inventory/tracking, (8) donor bronchoscopy, and (9) pediatric considerations. This consensus document aims to harmonize clinical and research practices for BAL collection and processing in LTx. The overarching goal is to enhance standardization and multicenter collaboration within the international LTx community and enable improvement and development of new BAL-based diagnostics.
The lung is a naturally tolerogenic organ. Lung regulatory T cells (T-regs) control lung mucosal tolerance. Here, we identified a lung IFNAR1hiTNFR2+ conventional DC2 (iR2D2) population that induces T-regs in the lung at steady state. Using conditional knockout mice, adoptive cell transfer, receptor blocking antibodies, and TNFR2 agonist, we showed that iR2D2 is a lung microenvironment-adapted dendritic cell population whose residence depends on the constitutive TNFR2 signaling. IFNβ-IFNAR1 signaling in iR2D2 is necessary and sufficient for T-regs induction in the lung. The Epcam+CD45− epithelial cells are the sole lung IFNβ producer at the steady state. Surprisingly, iR2D2 is plastic. In a house dust mite model of asthma, iR2D2 generates lung TH2 responses. Last, healthy human lungs have a phenotypically similar tolerogenic iR2D2 population, which became pathogenic in lung disease patients. Our findings elucidate lung epithelial cells IFNβ-iR2D2-T-regs axis in controlling lung mucosal tolerance and provide new strategies for therapeutic interventions.
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