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			 "You just do everything together, don't you," the doctor told 
			Maurer before delivering the bad news that she, too, had the 
			disease. 
 			Now the 34-year-old twins from Crown Point, Ind., are sharing a 
			medical rarity: Maurer donated skin and fat tissue for McCarthy's 
			breast reconstruction.
 			"It wasn't a question, she didn't have to ask me," said Maurer, a 
			college enrollment counselor. "Having a twin is very like having a 
			child. You would do anything for them ... in a heartbeat."
 			The first successful organ transplant was between identical twins in 
			Boston in 1954 and involved a kidney.
 			Since then, identical twins have been involved in many other 
			transplant operations, involving kidneys and other organs, bone 
			marrow, and stem cells. But breast reconstruction between identical 
			twins has only been done a handful of times; Maurer and McCarthy, a 
			nurse, are among the youngest patients. 			
			
			 
 			Identical twins are ideal donors because their skin, tissue and 
			organs are perfect genetic matches, explained Dr. David Song, chief 
			of plastic and reconstructive surgery at the University of Chicago 
			Medical Center. And that eliminates the need for anti-rejection 
			medicine, he said.
 			Song performed the twins' surgeries on Tuesday and both fared well.
 			Typically, breast reconstruction surgery involves implants and/or a 
			woman's own tissue, sometimes taken from the abdomen, thighs or 
			buttocks. But McCarthy is among women who don't have enough extra 
			tissue; plus, radiation treatment damaged tissue near her breasts. 
			So Maurer offered to be a donor.
 			McCarthy said her sister's sacrifice, "just so I can feel better 
			about myself ... is really humbling."
 			With their blonde bobs, sparkling brown eyes and easy, engaging 
			smiles, the twins are clearly mirror images of each other. 
			Discovering breast cancer in identical twins isn't unusual because 
			of their exact genetic makeup, Song said. With twins, there's also 
			often a "mirroring effect," with breast cancer developing in the 
			opposite breast, he said. That's what happened with McCarthy and 
			Maurer.
 			While their mother died from colon cancer last year, there was no 
			family history of breast cancer.
 			
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			McCarthy was diagnosed first, in December 2011, with triple-negative 
			breast cancer, a hard-to-treat form of cancer whose growth is not 
			fueled by hormones. She was nine months pregnant and her son was 
			born a week later. Soon after she started treatment, chemotherapy, 
			surgery to remove her right breast, and radiation.
 			Maurer was diagnosed with a very early-stage cancer in her left 
			breast a few months after her sister.
 			"Kelly was more upset than I was during my diagnosis, and likewise, 
			when she was diagnosed, I was a mess," Maurer said.
 			Maurer had a double mastectomy, recommended because her sister's 
			cancer was so aggressive, but she didn't need chemotherapy or 
			radiation. She had reconstruction with implants after the birth of 
			her second child last March.
 			McCarthy's operation this week involved a second mastectomy, and 
			reconstruction of both breasts. Some of her own tissue was used to 
			fashion one breast. At the same time, surgeons essentially performed 
			a "tummy tuck" on Maurer, removing lower abdominal skin and fat 
			tissue and transplanted it to her sister to create a second new 
			breast.
 			The twins have always been extremely close, sometimes speaking in 
			unison or completing each other's sentences. But now, McCarthy said, 
			"I feel closer. Her tissue is over my heart." 			
			
			 
			___
 			Online:
 			Breast reconstruction: http://bit.ly/PmJ7MN  [Associated 
					Press; LINDSEY TANNER, Associated Press] Copyright 2013 The Associated 
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