A Case of Post-transplant Lymphoproliferative Disorder After Successful Treatment of Islet Transplantation Without Graft Rejection
Koki Kurahashi, Takayuki Anazawa, Kei Yamane, Kentaro Tsuji, Tadahiko Matsumoto, Junji Fujikura, Etsuro Hatano

TL;DR
A rare case of lymphoma after islet transplantation was successfully treated while preserving the transplanted islet function.
Contribution
First reported case of PTLD after islet transplantation in Japan with successful treatment and graft preservation.
Findings
PTLD was diagnosed as diffuse large B-cell lymphoma five years after islet transplantation.
Careful immunosuppressive adjustment and chemotherapy achieved complete remission without graft rejection.
Islet graft function was preserved throughout treatment with no PTLD recurrence during follow-up.
Abstract
Post-transplant lymphoproliferative disorder (PTLD) is a lymphoid or plasmacytic proliferation that occurs in association with immunosuppression and is recognized as a relatively rare but serious complication following solid organ transplantation; however, PTLD following islet transplantation is extremely rare, and its optimal management remains unclear. We report the case of a 55-year-old woman with a history of type 1 diabetes mellitus who underwent living-donor kidney transplantation followed by deceased-donor pancreas transplantation and subsequently received three islet transplantations due to recurrent diabetes. Five years after the final islet transplantation, she developed persistent fever, and fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) revealed small intestinal wall thickening and lymphadenopathy in the mesentery and axilla. A biopsy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPancreatic function and diabetes · Renal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments · Immune Cell Function and Interaction
