Summary:
ntroduction: We conducted a retrospective study designed to monitor the fate of recipients of organs from donors with a CNS tumor to establish
whether or not the malignancy got transferred.
Material and methods: A total of 2,048 cadaveric organ donors were indicated for organ harvesting in the Czech Republic in the 19861998 period;
in 42 (2.1%), the cause of the brain death was a CNS tumor. In one case, autopsy showed metastasis of bronchogenic carcinoma so the diagnosis of
a CNS tumor was erroneous! A total of 92 organs (79 kidneys, 4 hearts, 5 livers, 3 pancreases, and 1 lung) were transplanted to 89 recipients.
Results: Six recipients died immediately after transplantation, eleven recipients died in the late post-transplant period; of this number, two died due
to malignancy (generalization of gynaecological carcinoma and bronchogenic carcinoma).
Conclusion: In a group of 42 donors with the diagnosis of a CNS tumor, no malignancy transmission was demonstrated in 89 recipients.
Key words:
cadaveric organ donor - CNS tumor - malignancy transmission
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