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A new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation reveals that there is a significant risk of serious skin cancers, including cutaneous(皮肤的) squamous cell carcinoma(鳞状细胞癌) and melanoma(黑素瘤) , in heart transplant patients. When people receive heart transplants, they need immune medications to keep their body from rejecting the transplant. The changes to the immune system they experience as a result of the medications can also make them more susceptible1 to developing cancers. Led by Murad Alam, MD, MSCI, of Northwestern University, researchers studied 10 years of patient information regarding 6271 heart transplants at 32 U.S. transplant centers. Results showed that when looking at what happened to many patients transplanted over a decade at various places in the U.S., these heart transplant patients were more likely to get skin cancers than other patients who had not had such transplants. The incidence increased post-transplant from 4- to 30-fold. "Improved patient education and appropriately increased screening and detection of skin cancers in heart transplant patients may potentially reduce their risk of serious morbidity2 and mortality," Alam notes. 点击收听单词发音
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