Korean J Pathol.
1999 Nov;33(11):1097-1101.
Multiple Kaposi's Sarcoma in the Renal Transplant Patient: A case report
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Clinical Pathology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul 137-701, Korea.
Abstract
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The Kaposi's sarcoma, which was found in an immunosuppressed patient of renal
transplantation, may have been developed by long term use of immunosuppressant agent after
the renal transplantation. The case was a 29-year-old woman who was diagnosed as chronic
renal failure in 1988, and since then, she had been on CAPD until May, 1997. After the renal
transplantation in May 1997, the patient has been prescribed cyclosporin and prednisone as
immunosuppressant agent. In June 1997, she showed clinical symptom of Kaposi's sarcoma
with multiple papules and nodules in the skin and viscera, such as ureter, urinary bladder,
stomach, duodenum and subcutaneous tissue of the chest. Multiple excisional biopsies were
carried out in the skin, ureter, urinary bladder, stomach and duodenum. All of excisional
biopses indicated nodular stages with extensive proliferation of spindle shaped, somewhat
pleomorphic cells which have slit-like vascular spaces, proliferation of small vessels, and
extravasation of erythrocytes. These lesions nearly diminished after sytemic chemotherpy,
excision and discontinuity of immunosuppressive agents.