We describe the accidental transplantation of a malignant sarcoma from a patient to a surgeon. Using molecular methods, we showed that the sarcomas in the unrelated patient and surgeon were genetically identical.
A 32-year-old man underwent emergency surgery to remove a malignant fibrous histiocytoma from his abdomen and died shortly thereafter of postoperative complications. During the operation the 53-year-old surgeon injured the palm of his left hand while placing a drain. The lesion was immediately disinfected and dressed. Five months later, the surgeon consulted a hand specialist because of a hard, circumscribed, tumor-like swelling, 3.0 cm (1.2 in.) in diameter, in his left palm at the base of the middle finger, where he had been injured during the operation. An extensive examination, including laboratory tests, did not reveal any signs of immune deficiency. The tumor was completely excised. Histologic examination revealed that it was a malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Two years later, the surgeon’s condition was good, and there was no evidence of recurrence or metastasis of the tumor. The pathologist who investigated both the patient’s tumor and the surgeon’s tumor raised the question whether the tumors were identical.
(Quote from the actual article from 1996)
The good news is: This is really really really unlikely and generally only possible for some rare types of cancer.
Unless you are an Tasmanian
Tigerdevil.What about that immortal cancer dog?
I think you mean Tasmanian devil, which do suffer from a freaky infectious cancer. Tasmanian tigers are extinct.
Yeah,you’re correct. That god damn backpack company with their misleading name must have gotten in my head again.
Sshhh! They know something we don’t.
There also have been some cases of cancer transmission from organ transplantation, particularly Kaposi’s sarcoma.
And there have been cases that got infected with rabies from organ transplants. Which is a death sentence at this stage.
Dogs have a similar thing
You think that’s bad? How about this guy who got his tapeworm’s cancer!
Okay. That’s definitely worse
I’d say it’s more than mildly interesting. I actually shifted in my chair reading this.
I leaned forward slightly while reading it