Lessons Learned from Surgical Management of the Largest Burned Patient Covered with Skin Isograft from His Monozygotic Twin Brother
Maurice Mimoun, Marc Chaouat, Nathaniel Malca, Oren Marco, David Boccara, Kevin Serror

TL;DR
A man with 95% burns was successfully treated using skin from his identical twin brother, avoiding rejection and achieving long-term recovery.
Contribution
Demonstrates the effectiveness of skin isografting from monozygotic twins in extreme burn cases.
Findings
All skin isografts survived without rejection over five years.
Donor twin experienced minimal complications and rapid healing.
Patient regained full independence and returned to work.
Abstract
Background: Early excision and autologous split-thickness skin grafting are the cornerstone of surgical management in severe burn injuries. In patients with extremely extensive deep burns, the lack of available donor sites represents a major life-threatening limitation. In the exceptional situation of monozygotic twins, skin isografting offers a unique solution by providing immunologically compatible skin without the risk of rejection. Case report: We report the case of a 33-year-old man who sustained flame burns involving 95% of his total body surface area, resulting in an extremely poor initial prognosis (ABSI 14, UBS 245). After early resuscitation and staged surgical excisions, the absence of sufficient autologous donor sites precluded definitive coverage using conventional techniques. On day 3, the existence of a monozygotic twin brother was identified. HLA genotyping confirmed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Burn Injury Management and Outcomes · Corneal Surgery and Treatments
