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A world-wide survey on kidney transplantation practices in breast cancer survivors: The need for new management guidelines
Authors:Keith S. Hansen  Hila Ghersin  Merisa Piper  Mehdi Tavakol  Brian Lee  Laura J. Esserman  John P. Roberts  Chris Freise  Nancy L. Ascher  Rita A. Mukhtar
Affiliation:1. Division of General Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California;2. Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California;3. Division of Transplant Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California;4. Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California
Abstract:
Kidney transplantation reduces mortality in patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD). Decisions about performing kidney transplantation in the setting of a prior cancer are challenging, as cancer recurrence in the setting of immunosuppression can result in poor outcomes. For cancer of the breast, rapid advances in molecular characterization have allowed improved prognostication, which is not reflected in current guidelines. We developed a 19-question survey to determine transplant surgeons’ knowledge, practice, and attitudes regarding guidelines for kidney transplantation in women with breast cancer. Of the 129 respondents from 32 states and 14 countries, 74.8% felt that current guidelines are inadequate. Surgeons outside the United States (US) were more likely to consider transplantation in a breast cancer patient without a waiting period (p = .017). Within the US, 29.2% of surgeons in the Western region would consider transplantation without a waiting period, versus 3.6% of surgeons in the East (p = .004). Encouragingly, 90.4% of providers surveyed would consider eliminating wait-times for women with a low risk of cancer recurrence based on the accurate prediction of molecular assays. These findings support the need for new guidelines incorporating individualized recurrence risk to improve care of ESRD patients with breast cancer.
Keywords:cancer/malignancy/neoplasia: risk factors  clinical decision-making  clinical research/practice  comorbidities  hematology/oncology  kidney transplantation/nephrology  kidney transplantation: living donor  survey
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