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Health
Related: About this forumShall cancer survivors remove the donor designation
from their driver license?
That is, the cancer survivor is not dying from cancer but from, say, a car accident. Are his organs safe to be donated?
Need to know.
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Shall cancer survivors remove the donor designation (Original Post)
question everything
Nov 2013
OP
PeaceNikki
(27,985 posts)1. Here you go...
http://www.cancer.org/treatment/survivorshipduringandaftertreatment/can-i-donate-my-organs
Can I Donate My Organs if Ive Had Cancer?
Many cancer survivors want to help other people by becoming organ donors. For many people who have had cancer, its possible to donatebut this varies by cancer type and medical condition.
Theres always a pressing need for donated organs. According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the organization that facilitates every organ transplant in the United States, more than 110,000 people are waiting for organs. Some organ donations, such as kidney donation, may be done when a person is still living. Others are possible only if a person wishing to donate passes away under certain circumstances.
Can a donated organ give someone cancer?
The risk of passing on cancer to the person who gets an organ is very small, but there have been some reports in the medical literature of this happening. This is partly because organ recipients are given drugs to suppress their immune systems to help prevent rejection of the transplant. This may make their immune system unable to identify and kill cancer cells that may have been transplanted with the organ.
According to a study by UNOS, under certain circumstances there may be an acceptable risk in using organs from donors who have had certain types of cancer. This is particularly true if theres a long cancer-free interval before the organ donation. At present, UNOS does not recommend accepting organs from people with actively spreading cancer. The exception to this is organs from donors with primary brain tumors that have not spread beyond the brain stem. These have not been found to impact life expectancy when compared to people who received organs from donors without brain cancer. In a study of nearly 500 organ recipients, no one got the disease from the donated tissue of a person who had brain cancer. Acceptance of organs for donation is up to each organ procurement agency and the organ recipient.
What if Im not sure if my medical condition allows me to donate organs?
Some people with cancer may not qualify to be living donors due to their medical condition. (That is, they may not be able to donate a kidney or a lobe of their liver.) But some may still have organs and body tissues that can be used after they pass away.
If you want to donate, its OK to list yourself as a donor on your drivers license. Be sure that your family knows of your wishes, too, since they may be asked to give consent. If your cancer has been actively spreading, internal organs will not be taken. But if you die after being cancer-free for a long time, your organs may be used. Other tissues, such as skin, tendons, and bone can often be used, too. Careful testing of the organs and tissues is done at the time of death. The decision about which organs or tissues can be safely used is then made by medical professionals, as long your family agrees that you wanted to donate.
Even if other organs and tissues cant be used, donating the corneas from your eyes is one way to offer help to others. Almost all people with cancer (except those with certain blood or eye cancers) can donate their corneas. You can learn more about cornea donation from the Eye Bank Association of America (see the To learn more section).
If you have questions about whether you may be able to donate your organs or tissues, please contact UNOS or Donate Life America (see the To learn more section below) or the organ procurement center in your community.
To learn more....
http://www.cancer.org/treatment/survivorshipduringandaftertreatment/can-i-donate-my-organs
Can I Donate My Organs if Ive Had Cancer?
Many cancer survivors want to help other people by becoming organ donors. For many people who have had cancer, its possible to donatebut this varies by cancer type and medical condition.
Theres always a pressing need for donated organs. According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), the organization that facilitates every organ transplant in the United States, more than 110,000 people are waiting for organs. Some organ donations, such as kidney donation, may be done when a person is still living. Others are possible only if a person wishing to donate passes away under certain circumstances.
Can a donated organ give someone cancer?
The risk of passing on cancer to the person who gets an organ is very small, but there have been some reports in the medical literature of this happening. This is partly because organ recipients are given drugs to suppress their immune systems to help prevent rejection of the transplant. This may make their immune system unable to identify and kill cancer cells that may have been transplanted with the organ.
According to a study by UNOS, under certain circumstances there may be an acceptable risk in using organs from donors who have had certain types of cancer. This is particularly true if theres a long cancer-free interval before the organ donation. At present, UNOS does not recommend accepting organs from people with actively spreading cancer. The exception to this is organs from donors with primary brain tumors that have not spread beyond the brain stem. These have not been found to impact life expectancy when compared to people who received organs from donors without brain cancer. In a study of nearly 500 organ recipients, no one got the disease from the donated tissue of a person who had brain cancer. Acceptance of organs for donation is up to each organ procurement agency and the organ recipient.
What if Im not sure if my medical condition allows me to donate organs?
Some people with cancer may not qualify to be living donors due to their medical condition. (That is, they may not be able to donate a kidney or a lobe of their liver.) But some may still have organs and body tissues that can be used after they pass away.
If you want to donate, its OK to list yourself as a donor on your drivers license. Be sure that your family knows of your wishes, too, since they may be asked to give consent. If your cancer has been actively spreading, internal organs will not be taken. But if you die after being cancer-free for a long time, your organs may be used. Other tissues, such as skin, tendons, and bone can often be used, too. Careful testing of the organs and tissues is done at the time of death. The decision about which organs or tissues can be safely used is then made by medical professionals, as long your family agrees that you wanted to donate.
Even if other organs and tissues cant be used, donating the corneas from your eyes is one way to offer help to others. Almost all people with cancer (except those with certain blood or eye cancers) can donate their corneas. You can learn more about cornea donation from the Eye Bank Association of America (see the To learn more section).
If you have questions about whether you may be able to donate your organs or tissues, please contact UNOS or Donate Life America (see the To learn more section below) or the organ procurement center in your community.
To learn more....
http://www.cancer.org/treatment/survivorshipduringandaftertreatment/can-i-donate-my-organs
question everything
(47,476 posts)2. Thank you for this very comprehensive response
Thus, as long as the cancer is in remission, one should keep the donor designation.
PeaceNikki
(27,985 posts)3. Honestly, *I* would keep it no matter what.
They carefully asses each situation as it arises.