Intestinal transplantation in Familial Adenomatous Polyposis
Emilio Canovai, Sarah Upponi, Irum Amin

TL;DR
Intestinal transplantation can be a life-saving treatment for advanced Familial Adenomatous Polyposis with desmoid tumors, offering high survival but requiring careful patient selection.
Contribution
The paper presents the largest single-center experience on intestinal transplantation for FAP-related desmoids from 2007–2024.
Findings
Fifteen FAP patients underwent intestinal transplantation with a five-year survival rate of 92%.
Technical challenges included managing abdominal wall fistulation and extra-abdominal recurrences.
Graft selection and preoperative risk stratification are critical due to long-term cancer risks in FAP patients.
Abstract
In patients with Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP), large desmoid tumors can develop all over the body. However, the most frequent presentation is as large intra-abdominal masses, usually located in the mesentery of the small bowel. From there, they tend to grow and invade both the abdominal wall and/or the retroperitoneal structures. This can cause life-threatening complications such as recurrent abdominal sepsis with fistulation and damage to vital organs. In selected patients, the only option may be radical resection and replacement by intestinal transplantation (ITx). We aimed to review all the current literature on ITx for FAP-related desmoids and provide an update from the largest single-center experience (2007–2024). All patients undergoing ITx for FAP-related desmoid were included. Between 2007 and 2024, 166 ITx was performed in 158 patients at Addenbrooke’s Hospital,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSoft tissue tumor case studies · Tumors and Oncological Cases · Sarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment
