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...objections of a few eminent cardiologists at the San Francisco meeting. New Orleans' Dr. George E. Burch, the college's new president, joined Los Angeles' Dr. Eliot Corday and Manhattan's Dr. Simon Dack in calling for at least a three-month moratorium on heart transplants. The college's outgoing president, Philadelphia's Dr. William Likoff, announced a conference of leading physicians, lawyers and theologians, to be held late this month in Bethesda, Md., to discuss the legal, ethical and practical aspects of transplants. And then there is the resolution, proposed to the Senate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Heart Surgery: Were Transplants Premature? | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

Medical experts have long suspected that organs donated by cancer victims might cause danger-and possibly death -to their recipients. Still, for lack of other available transplant sources, they continued using them. Last week, writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, a kidney transplant team at Boston's Peter Bent Brigham Hospital told how cancer can be transplanted along with a donated organ. At the same time, they provided new, clear-cut evidence that cancer, like a foreign organ, can also be rejected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transplants: Casting Out Cancer | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

...least four early transplant patients who had received kidneys from donors with cancer later developed cancer themselves. Two of the four, operated on by a team headed by Dr. Richard E. Wilson, died as a result. A third died of complications following surgery. The fourth recipient, a 38-year-old father of ten, survived, further proving that the body's immunological processes may cast out cancerous tissue in the same way that they reject any transplanted tissue when immunosuppressive drugs are not used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transplants: Casting Out Cancer | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

...kidney that Joseph J. Palazola received in August 1964, came from a donor who had died of cancer that had spread from the lungs to the brain. At the time of the transplant, there was no evidence to suggest the cancer had traveled to other parts of the victim's body. Nonetheless, Palazola developed a malignant tumor near the transplanted kidney within 18 months. When radiation treatments failed to reduce the tumor, Palazola was taken off immunosuppressives. When this caused rapid rejection of the transplant, the kidney and most of the tumor were excised...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transplants: Casting Out Cancer | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

...Wilson and his colleagues performed a second transplant on Palazola in November 1966. This time the donor was his mother. Last week the doctors reported that "he had returned to full daily activity and has remained free of cancer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transplants: Casting Out Cancer | 3/8/1968 | See Source »

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