Excess of cancer in patients receiving renal transplantation is well-known in Western countries, but information in Japan remains limited. Our study examined whether excess risk is found in patients receiving renal transplantation in Japan. Between 1970 and 1995, 1155 males and 589 females underwent renal transplantation in 6 hospitals, and a total of 12,982 person-years of observation was accumulated. Malignancies developed in 2.6% of patients; O/E ratio was 2.78. Median interval from renal transplantation to tumor development was 58 months. The interval in the patients receiving medication with cyclosporine-A (CyA) (median, 42.5 months) was significantly shorter than that with non-CyA (median, 95.5 months). Median age at the diagnosis of malignancy was 40 years, which is much younger than that in the general population. Relative risk was highest in renal cancer, followed by thyroid cancer, malignant lymphoma and uterine cancer. A distribution of malignancies was different from that reported from Western countries. These findings showed the excess risk of malignancies in Japan with renal transplants, especially in male patients, similar to that observed in Western countries, though the types of malignancy were different.
Epstein-Barr (EB) virus-associated primary smooth muscle tumors have been reported in immunosuppressed young patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and young people who have undergone liver transplantation. An autopsy case of EB virus-associated smooth muscle cell tumor in a 21 year old female who received immunosuppressive therapy following renal transplantation is reported. Multiple tumor nodules were present in the liver, but no primary lesion was found in any other organ. Histologically, the nodules were composed of spindle cells, positive for alpha-smooth muscle actin, which were arranged in fascicles and closely associated with vascular channels, thereby suggesting a vascular smooth muscle cell origin. EB virus infection of the tumor cells was clearly demonstrated by in situ hybridization with an EB virus-encoded RNA 1 (EBER-1) probe. The present case illustrates that EB virus infection may play some role in the development of smooth muscle tumors not only in immunocompromised young patients with liver allografts, but also in those with renal allografts.
To be remembered is the high frequency of concomitant gastrointestinal tumors in patients with appendiceal mucocele, especially caused by mucinous neoplasms. A total colonoscopic surveillance will afford earlier diagnosis of synchronous colonic cancers in these patients.
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