BrandyChloe, I would want to report that doctor. He gave you factually incorrect medical information because he wished to have you follow his agenda. I find that unconscionable and am glad you followed your own path.
I think once the skin cancer started to grow, for my boys James and Gregory, then the immuno suppressants allowed the growth to be faster bigger nastier. Whereas if you were a person not on immuno suppressants it might be a slower trajectory and more effectively treated.
Here is a link about skin cancer:http://at-risc.org/TransplantPatients.aspx"....In Australia after fourth post-transplant year, 25 percent of heart transplant patients actually die from skin cancer."I think it is important to understand what is the risk. The minimum way to define the cancer risk is that the risk per year is constant and independent over time. In such a case, the total risk within 20 years is 20 times as high as one year and 2 times as high as 10 years. In the real world, the skin cancer may depend on cumulative exposing to the sun. That is, the risk per year may increase over time, so the total risk within 20 years are more than 20 times as the risk in one year.
Quote from: cariad on July 05, 2010, 12:51:38 PMBrandyChloe, I would want to report that doctor. He gave you factually incorrect medical information because he wished to have you follow his agenda. I find that unconscionable and am glad you followed your own path.Totally agree with this. I was aghast when I read that!!! While the technology of transplantation has improved a lot over time, a live donation is ALWAYS preferred due to the fact you can plan it, and take the organ in a controlled way, and the organ/donor body won't be under duress or have any other problems with it - it is the best possible situation to be in.
Yes I was fully informed of the cancer risks and every other side effect of the anti-rejection drugs by Mayo in Phoenix before the transplant and when they asked me if I was still ready to proceed I said I've never been so ready for anything in my life.
Cariad,All numbers, 65 times, 4 times and 25%, are from publications with detailed citations in that website. So it is not difficult to check the sample size through reading the original papers if interested. The papers are quite old, and there should be some new publications on it. As to the total risk of cancers, it will help you understand better if you realize the definition of total risk involves the unit of time. Just think this way, is total risk of getting a cancer the same within one day and within 20 years for a transplant patient? If your answer is no, then you get my idea. If your answer is yes, then need sometime to study the risks. Whether the risk of cancers per year increases or not, the website put out by the professionals said yes. You can find some evidences to argue against this view. I have not found any evidences in your posts to oppose this view. Regardless the amounts of risks, the most important thing is how one to weight different risks. Personally, I would go for transplant at the time close to starting dialysis, if possible. I know some patients who weight the transplant and post-transplant risks very high and do not want to have a transplant. There are not any right or wrong decisions here since no one knows her or his real risk until she or he did the transplant. We know only the risks for a patient population, not a given individual.
"82% of kidney transplant recipients develop skin cancer 20 years after being transplanted" by another report.
I see you still are deeply confused, Jie. Risk is not a linear function in humans, that is just muddled thinking and you are bordering on offensive with your condescending tone. The risk of dying does not even progress in a linear fashion - there are ages with statistically higher odds of dying than their older counterparts. This discussion has entered into the ridiculous and has become a total waste of time. Believe what you want but I would not enter into the field of scientifically analysing human behaviour and cost/benefit if I were you. All I can hope is that people go with the option that suits them, and that those people who opt for transplant take the precautions that everyone on planet earth is advised to take regarding skin cancer. Quote from: Jie on July 09, 2010, 08:15:44 PM "82% of kidney transplant recipients develop skin cancer 20 years after being transplanted" by another report. I'm sure there is a story behind that one but I don't care to look into it. You seem desperate to prove yourself right with random quotes. Transplant has worked out fabulously for me and coming into the transplant section spewing quotes and links and advising people to decline a preemptive transplant against all prevailing medical evidence is irresponsible. Most skin cancers are treatable, especially if caught early, so I resent your implication that if one wants to LIVE a long time, that they should spend years on dialysis. Ludicrous. There are more risks to the life of both dialysis and transplant patients than just cancer. If skin cancer appears, treat it. My mother told me that her mother has (dunh dunh dunh) SKIN CANCER!!! Basal cell carcinoma. My grandmother told my mother it was no big deal even before the doctors told her the exact same thing. They removed it, she's fine. Oh, and she's 92. Like I said, live long enough, cancer will appear in everyone. I was told that 80% of men ages 80 and over have prostate cancer. Sorry, men of IHD: let the terror commence....
Cariad,You are so right on with your comments on this thread. There are a couple of people on here who are so determined to scare the hell out of people that are considering a transplant it is truly amazing. The only other time I have encountered this is the manager of the Fresenius clinic I was treated at. Maybe the three of you should start a new sight called "I love dialysis" because I actually heard the manager use that phrase.Ed
Quote from: edersham on July 10, 2010, 04:44:47 PMCariad,You are so right on with your comments on this thread. There are a couple of people on here who are so determined to scare the hell out of people that are considering a transplant it is truly amazing. The only other time I have encountered this is the manager of the Fresenius clinic I was treated at. Maybe the three of you should start a new sight called "I love dialysis" because I actually heard the manager use that phrase.EdOh, Ed, I hear you. And thanks for the support. I agree with you that this discussion is taking on more of a "one team against the other" feel that is so unfortunate. We are a better support group than this. Peter, I read your first message in which you quoted me, but sorry, your second is absolutely too long for me to wade through. That's not meant as criticism, just personal circumstance. Right now, if I were to ask a risk question it would be "Is having children worth the risk of getting a child who tantrums at least twice a week?" (OK, yes, it is worth it. ) I really challenge anyone to find somewhere where I said that there was no serious risk of skin cancer in transplant patients. You seem to have missed the point of my talking about my grandmother - I had been saying I have zero family history of skin cancer, and now I am correcting myself by saying I have a 92 year old grandmother who was diagnosed with basal cell carcinoma. It was a lighthearted comment, not meant to be used as evidence of anything. The timing of my mother's call and this discussion made me laugh. My transplant centre went over the risks ad nauseum, and it was not Mayo. I have been hearing about the risk of skin cancer from every random nephrologist since the early 1990s, so I don't agree with you that this is unique to Mayo. Far, far from it. I have had my garish and painfully protracted death foretold by plenty of doctors. Apparently, believing I am healthy and being confident that I can manage with whatever life throws at me is considered a form of arrogance to some doctors, because they have certainly tried to scare me into blindly following their demands. Unsuccessfully, may I add.The original question from Sax was is a transplant worth the risk of cancer. This is obviously going to boil down to a constellation of personal factors unique to each individual. For me, the answer is ABSOLUTELY. Thirty four years with almost zero problems and little in the way of maintenance requirements? Yes, I would say that beats dialysis. Is the risk of entirely different types of cancer worth it to me to be in a tolerance trial in which I have every reason to believe that I will be off all meds within eight months? Yes, a thousand times, yes. Cadaver donor transplant and dialysis may offer the same success rate, however, Sax has potential live donors, and I had a live donor. People who have had transplants on here and are speaking from personal experience have overwhelmingly stated that the risk was worth it to them. I think this is wonderful news, since I would hate to hear that anyone regretted their choice, no matter which way they decided to go. You're right, Peter, there is little reason to get upset about this. If one were to go back and read through this discussion from the beginning, one might note that I brought up skin cancer by repeating what I have been told for almost two decades. It seems to me that the people here know about the risk of skin cancer, so I see no reason to belabour the point.