Incidental lymphadenopathy in renal transplantation
NX Ho, AK Malik, S Moulding, F Farrow, D Talbot, S White, D Rix, G Sen, D Manas, A Amer, R Figuereido, CH Wilson

TL;DR
This study examines enlarged lymph nodes found during kidney transplants and suggests that suspicious or large nodes should be tested for potential diseases.
Contribution
The study introduces a recommendation for histological assessment of suspicious or large iliac lymph nodes during renal transplantation.
Findings
In the first cycle, 14.47% of patients had enlarged lymph nodes, but only reactive changes were found.
In the second cycle, 4.85% had enlarged lymph nodes, with one case of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia identified.
The study recommends assessing lymph nodes greater than 10mm in diameter for potential pathological conditions.
Abstract
Iliac lymphadenectomy is performed to provide anastomotic access during the vascular implantation procedure in renal transplantation. Iliac lymph nodes (LNs) are often enlarged, but there are no standardised guidelines for the management of incidentally enlarged LNs during transplantation. We aimed to evaluate histological findings of LNs sent for examination at our unit. Patients were evaluated in two distinct date cycles. In the first cycle, lymphadenectomy and histological assessment were performed at the discretion of the transplanting surgeon. In the second cycle, all incidentally enlarged LNs were sent for histological assessment, regardless of size. In the first cycle (n = 76), 11 patients (14.47%) had incidentally enlarged iliac LNs on lymphadenectomy and histology showed only reactive changes. In the second cycle (n = 165), eight patients (4.85%) had incidentally enlarged LNs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLymphadenopathy Diagnosis and Analysis · Lymphoma Diagnosis and Treatment · Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia Research
