Case report: Donor transmitted angiosarcoma presumed derived from donor CNS hemangioma and transmitted by lung transplantation (2022).

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Record number: 
2201
Adverse Occurrence type: 
MPHO Type: 
Estimated frequency: 
The only known lesion in the donor was a cerebral hemangioma, which is considered to be a benign lesion. The following discussion relates to angiosarcomas and sarcomas in general. Most recent risk assessment for sarcoma (Council of Europe, 2022): Due to the very aggressive behavior of sarcoma, they are considered an unacceptable risk for organ donation at any stage of disease. Sarcoma in donor history: Because of the very aggressive behavior of sarcoma, they are mostly considered an unacceptable risk for organ donation. After curative treatment and a recurrence-free survival of > 5 years, sarcomas are still assumed to be associated with a high risk for transmission.
Time to detection: 
First lung nodule detected at 3 years posttransplant, interpreted as benign tissue on biopsy at 45 months. Continued growth and additional (liver) lesions occurred. Liver biopsy at 61 months diagnosed as vascular lesion with uncertain biological behavior, and original lung biopsy diagnosis revised to similar result. Ovarian lesions detected on scan at 74 months, and salpingo-oophorectomy at 82 months led to diagnosis of bilateral angiosarcoma.
Alerting signals, symptoms, evidence of occurrence: 
Routine chest CT detected 15 mm nodule in lung. This lesion continued to grow and others arose.
Demonstration of imputability or root cause: 
Analysis of DNA short tandem repeats established donor origin of tumors in ovaries.
Imputability grade: 
3 Definite/Certain/Proven
Groups audience: 
Suggest new keywords: 
Malignancy
Case report
Deceased donor
Lung transplant
Lung transplantation
DNA typing
Angiosarcoma
Hemangioma
Therapy discussed
Reference attachment: 
Suggest references: 
Bos S, Daniëls L, Michaux L, Vanden Bempt I, Vermeer S, Woei-A-Jin FSH, Schöffski P, Weynand B, Sciot R, Declercq S, Ceulemans LJ, Godinas L, Verleden GM, Van Raemdonck DE, Dupont LJ, Vos R; Leuven Lung Transplant Group. Case Report: An Unusual Course of Angiosarcoma After Lung Transplantation. Front Immunol. 2022 Jan 3;12:789851. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.789851. PMID: 35046948; PMCID: PMC8761760.
Note: 
Uploaded MN 5/13/22 Second review KM 4/13/23 fully agree
Expert comments for publication: 
This patient underwent bilateral lung transplant with organs from a 44 year old woman who died following complications of a neurosurgical procedure for previously biopsy-proven cerebral hemangioma. The recipient tumors were clearly shown to be of donor origin. The problematic area lies in understanding the underlying pathogenesis of the events. The authors suggest that the cerebral lesion could have represented a precursor lesion leading to the multifocal recipient disease. They do show similar molecular features between the malignant ovarian and earlier indeterminate pulmonary vascular lesions. A low-power photomicrograph of the original (pretransplant) donor CNS lesion appears to show a cavernous hemangioma; unfortunately, no molecular studies are available. Assuming that their interpretation is correct, this would imply that benign circulating cells from the hemangioma deposited in the lung and underwent eventual malignant transformation. A separate possibliity is that the initial pulmonary allograft lesion represented a separate lesion that was so small as to be undetectable at transplant. (The lesion was not FDG-avid on initial examination). In either case, it does seem that a fully developed malignant neoplasm was not present in the donor at time of transplant and that this represents a posttransplant evolution of tumor development from donor cells, i.e., donor-derived neoplasm. One lesson of this report, as noted by the authors, is that "donor origin of tumors detected in solid organ transplant recipients should always be suspected in case of a uncommon disease course or histology".