Three of the most frequent cancers occurring in transplant recipients after the skin: Kaposi's sarcoma and spino- and baso-cellular carcinomas. The two latter neoplasms are often preceded by precancerous lesions such as keratosis, warts, porokeratosis and keratoacanthomas. We describe the clinical presentations of these lesions and detail the possible therapies in each case: local treatment, surgery, modulation of immunosuppression, and chemotherapySCOPUS: re.jSCOPUS: sh.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
This study examines the association of keratotic skin lesions with the development of skin cancer in...
The occurrence of neoplasms is one of the most common complications and second most frequent cause o...
Solid organ transplant and subsequent graft survival have increased worldwide, while immunosuppressi...
peer reviewedImmunosuppressive therapy associated with organ transplant leads to an increased risk t...
Swiss clinical practice guidelines for skin cancer in organ transplant recipients Transplant patient...
Kaposi's sarcoma and Merkel cell carcinoma represent potentially lethal cutaneous complications in o...
peer reviewedDrug-induced immunosuppression is the necessary corollary of organ transplantation. Thi...
Swiss clinical practice guidelines for skin cancer in organ transplant recipients Transplant patient...
Non-melanoma skin cancers represent a major cause of morbidity after organ transplantation. Squamou...
Abstract: Non-melanoma skin cancers represent a major cause of morbidity after organ transplantation...
Organ transplant recipients (OTR) are at a significantly increased risk for developing a wide variet...
Patients with a solid organ transplant have increased in numbers and in individual survival in Switz...
In the last two decades, the optimization of organ preservation and surgical techniques, and the per...
Solid-organ transplant recipients have a high incidence of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) a...
O Sarcoma de Kaposi (SK) é neoplasia maligna multicêntrica, cutânea e extracutânea, que tem sido des...
This study examines the association of keratotic skin lesions with the development of skin cancer in...
The occurrence of neoplasms is one of the most common complications and second most frequent cause o...
Solid organ transplant and subsequent graft survival have increased worldwide, while immunosuppressi...
peer reviewedImmunosuppressive therapy associated with organ transplant leads to an increased risk t...
Swiss clinical practice guidelines for skin cancer in organ transplant recipients Transplant patient...
Kaposi's sarcoma and Merkel cell carcinoma represent potentially lethal cutaneous complications in o...
peer reviewedDrug-induced immunosuppression is the necessary corollary of organ transplantation. Thi...
Swiss clinical practice guidelines for skin cancer in organ transplant recipients Transplant patient...
Non-melanoma skin cancers represent a major cause of morbidity after organ transplantation. Squamou...
Abstract: Non-melanoma skin cancers represent a major cause of morbidity after organ transplantation...
Organ transplant recipients (OTR) are at a significantly increased risk for developing a wide variet...
Patients with a solid organ transplant have increased in numbers and in individual survival in Switz...
In the last two decades, the optimization of organ preservation and surgical techniques, and the per...
Solid-organ transplant recipients have a high incidence of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) a...
O Sarcoma de Kaposi (SK) é neoplasia maligna multicêntrica, cutânea e extracutânea, que tem sido des...
This study examines the association of keratotic skin lesions with the development of skin cancer in...
The occurrence of neoplasms is one of the most common complications and second most frequent cause o...
Solid organ transplant and subsequent graft survival have increased worldwide, while immunosuppressi...