07 March 2014 : Case report
Determining eligibility for and preparation to kidney transplantation of a patient with Lynch syndrome – a case report and literature review
Jolanta GozdowskaABCDEF, Monika BieniaszAB, Michał WszołaAB, Rafał KieszekAB, Piotr DomagałaAB, Jakub DrozdowskiAB, Aleksandra TomaszekAB, Artur KwiatkowskiAB, Andrzej ChmuraAB, Magdalena DurlikABEDOI: 10.12659/AOT.890250
Ann Transplant 2014; 19:124-128
Abstract
Background: Lynch syndrome (HNPCC, hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer) is a syndrome of predisposition to cancer inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion. A person with Lynch syndrome has a considerably increased risk of colorectal cancer in comparison with the general population.
Case Report: We present a case of a 24-year-old man with Lynch syndrome (carrying an MLH1 gene mutation) who had colorectal adenocarcinoma diagnosed at 16 years of age. During this time, he had a colectomy performed and chemotherapy was administered (5-FU, CDDP, Leucovorin). Due to hepatic metastases, a decision was made to change chemotherapy to IF with ADM, as a result of which complete remission was obtained. However, kidney failure developed. Its cause was not fully elucidated. The patient was treated by hemodialyses. After six years of complete remission of cancer, kidney transplantation started to be considered. Before the patient was found eligible for transplantation, extended diagnostic tests were performed: whole body PET scan, tumour marker tests and intestinal endoscopy, which did not reveal any abnormalities. The patient had a family donor (mother) who had no contraindications to kidney donation. Kidney transplantation was performed on 15/10/2012. Induction with basiliximab was used, along with steroids, tacrolimus, and mycophenolate mofetil was also administered. Three months after the procedure CNI/mTOR conversion was performed. The maintenance treatment includes prednisone, everolimus and mycophenolate mofetil. One year after transplantation, renal function is normal. The patient is subjected to close oncological surveillance.
Conclusions: The risk of recurrence or new development of cancer related to immunosuppressive treatment should be considered on a case-by-case basis. In patients with a history or high risk of cancer, immunosuppression protocols based on the m-TOR pathway inhibitors should be used, if possible. Oncological surveillance and early detection of new cancer lesions are also important.
Keywords: Kidney Transplantation, Lynch syndrome, malignancies
In Press
15 Mar 2024 : Review article
Approaches and Challenges in the Current Management of Cytomegalovirus in Transplant Recipients: Highlighti...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.941185
18 Mar 2024 : Original article
Does Antibiotic Use Increase the Risk of Post-Transplantation Diabetes Mellitus? A Retrospective Study of R...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.943282
20 Mar 2024 : Original article
Transplant Nephrectomy: A Comparative Study of Timing and Techniques in a Single InstitutionAnn Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.942252
28 Mar 2024 : Original article
Association Between FEV₁ Decline Rate and Mortality in Long-Term Follow-Up of a 21-Patient Pilot Clinical T...Ann Transplant In Press; DOI: 10.12659/AOT.942823
Most Viewed Current Articles
05 Apr 2022 : Original article
Impact of Statins on Hepatocellular Carcinoma Recurrence After Living-Donor Liver TransplantationDOI :10.12659/AOT.935604
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e935604
12 Jan 2022 : Original article
Risk Factors for Developing BK Virus-Associated Nephropathy: A Single-Center Retrospective Cohort Study of ...DOI :10.12659/AOT.934738
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e934738
22 Nov 2022 : Original article
Long-Term Effects of Everolimus-Facilitated Tacrolimus Reduction in Living-Donor Liver Transplant Recipient...DOI :10.12659/AOT.937988
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e937988
15 Mar 2022 : Case report
Combined Liver, Pancreas-Duodenum, and Kidney Transplantation for Patients with Hepatitis B Cirrhosis, Urem...DOI :10.12659/AOT.935860
Ann Transplant 2022; 27:e935860