Background: Renal transplant patients are at increased risk for warts, actinic keratoses and carcinomas. A descriptive study was conducted to investigate the number and frequency of dermatologic examinations in renal transplant patients with a functional graft. The incidence and clinical factors for skin tumours were also assessed.
Patients and methods: We sent an initial questionnaire to 686 renal transplant patients asking whether they had consulted a dermatologist since the time of transplantation. A second questionnaire was then sent to private dermatologists in order to evaluate dermatologic follow-up and the frequency and anatomic distribution of warts and cancerous skin lesions. At the same time, the patients' medical records at the hospital were studied.
Results: About two thirds of the 436 patients included in the study have seen a dermatologist at least once since the time of transplantation. Only 31.2% are being followed up regularly by a dermatologist. The incidence of warts and actinic keratoses is 48.8% and 20.6% respectively, and increases with the duration of immunosuppressive therapy. The incidence of carcinomas is 20.2%, with basal cell carcinomas being seen more frequently than other carcinomas. Risk factors identified for carcinomas are older age at transplantation, duration of immunosuppressive therapy, fair skin, presence of warts and actinic keratoses. All these skin lesions arise predominantly on highly sun-exposed surfaces. Nevertheless, squamous cell carcinomas are more often confined to sun-exposed skin than Bowen's diseases and basal cell carcinomas.
Discussion: Dermatologic follow-up of transplant recipients has rarely been investigated and our study shows that monitoring of skin cancer is probably inadequate. It also confirms the high incidence of carcinomas among renal-transplant recipients in a temperate climate, although basal cell carcinomas are more frequent than squamous cell carcinomas.