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Squamous-cell carcinoma of the skin is 65- to 250-times more
frequent in patients who have received an organ transplant, due to the
side effects of the anti-rejection medications they are prescribed. Skin
cancers in transplant patients also tend to be more aggressive and more
deadly.
There are currently no guidelines that require transplant patients
to be screened for skin cancer pre- and post-operation. All
organ transplant recipients, regardless of race, should receive routine,
total-body screenings for skin cancer, suggested a new study from Drexel University College of Medicine.
Out of 259 nonwhite transplant recipients who were evaluated in the
study, 19 skin cancer lesions were identified in 6% of the
patients. The research was published recently in JAMA Dermatology.
Further, the study shows risk factors for nonwhite transplant
recipients likely differ between races/ethnicities - which represents
an important shift in how dermatologists approach minority patients.
Doctors should keep these unique characteristics in mind when examining
and counseling nonwhite patients about prevention strategies, said
Christina Lee Chung, associate professor of dermatology in the
College of Medicine and director of the Drexel Dermatology Center for
Transplant Patients.
"Once physicians began to realize there was a significant number of
transplant patients dying from skin cancer, there was a push to prevent
it. But much of the field has focused on trying to decrease the
morbidity of the Caucasian transplant population, which is more
susceptible to skin cancer overall," said Chung, the study's principal
investigator. "This is the first research of its kind to look at a
diverse population of nonwhite transplant recipients and how skin cancer
affects them."
At some centers,
Chung said, fair-skinned patients are encouraged to receive a full-body
evaluation from a dermatologist. While black transplant patients, on
the other hand, may only be sent to a specialist if a suspicious lesion
is identified. And while a white patient may be screened yearly, a black
patient is likelier to either never or only be evaluated one time
post-transplant.
"Overall, people tend to believe that dark-skinned patients can't
get skin cancer," Chung said. "But they are taking the same
immunosuppressant drugs as their white counterparts."
The Drexel Dermatology Center for Transplant Patients - which
opened in 2011 - is uniquely positioned to track the rates of skin
cancer in nonwhite patients. As one of the only models of its kind, the
center provides coordinated, post-transplant dermatological care to
every single patient who receives a transplant at Hahnemann University
Hospital or who is managed by the Drexel transplant program. That means
each patient, regardless of race, is screened annually for skin cancer.
With a large African-American, Asian and Hispanic patient
population, Drexel researchers were able to perform a retrospective
medical record review of 259 nonwhite transplant recipients who had
visited the center between 2011 and 2016.
They found six black patients, five Asian patients and four Hispanic
patients presented with 19 different cancerous lesions. Interestingly,
the predominant type of skin cancer diagnosed within the group was in
the "in situ" stage, which means it was caught in its earliest form. No
black patients were diagnosed with a late-stage skin cancer.
This suggests that screening for skin cancer early and often can
prevent it from becoming more aggressive, which touts the Drexel
Dermatology Center for Transplant Patients as a successful model that
Chung hopes can be replicated throughout the country.
Finally, the researchers found that the majority of skin cancers in
black transplant patients were found in the groin-genital area, and most
of those lesions tested positive for high-risk human papillomavirus
(HPV). For the Asian population, sun exposure appeared to be the most
significant risk factor for skin cancer.
The potential association between HPV and squamous-cell carcinoma
warrants careful examination of the groin, genitalia and perianal area
in search of early lesions, the study authors write. The finding also
suggests there may be significant differences in risk factors pertaining
to the development of skin cancer between white and black organ
transplant recipients.
"If you're spending all of your time counseling your black patients
about sunscreen, you're probably missing more important aspects of skin
cancer prevention," Chung said.
Instead, she added, consideration should be given to
administering the HPV vaccine to all patients prior to transplantation.
In addition, black patients, and especially those with a history of HPV,
should be taught how to identify potential cancerous lesions in their
groin areas.
"The ultimate takeaway is that though people of color are at
decreased risk for skin cancer, but they're not at risk. And those
people have different risk factors," Chung said. "So when you see a
person of color who is a transplant patient, you need to approach them
differently, depending on their skin type and tone, where they are from
and their medical history."
Source-Eurekalert