| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2876679 | The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2014 | 10 Pages | 
Abstract
												Risk factors for lung cancer in lung transplant recipients are a history of smoking and immunosuppression, to which adds increasing use of lungs from donors with a smoking history. The three typical presentations are incidental diagnosis on the explanted lung, concerning less than 2%; lung cancer developing on the lung graft, accounting for less than 1%; and incidence of lung cancer on the native lung, estimated at 9%. Treatment along available guidelines may be hampered by decreased lung function owing to chronic rejection or adverse effects of immunosuppression. Prognosis is comparable to a general population in resected stage I cancer and is less favorable in advanced stages.
											Keywords
												p-yCNIsDFIMMFBOSSqCCbilateral lung transplantationLTXSLTXBACPack-yearsChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseCOPDBronchiolitis obliterans syndromeDisease-free intervalmycophenolate mofetilCalcineurin inhibitorssingle lung transplantationLung transplantationBronchioloalveolar carcinomaSquamous cell carcinoma
												Related Topics
												
													Health Sciences
													Medicine and Dentistry
													Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
												
											Authors
												Anne B.M. MD, MS, Pierre-Emmanuel MD, PhD, Nicola MD, Romain MD, PhD, Gilbert MD, PhD, 
											