Submitted by SnooRegrets2663 t3_ylxnkc in askscience
Let's say that a person who didn't know they had a malignant tumour gave a blood donation which happened to contain cancer cells. Ignoring the processes of cleaning and keeping the blood fresh, could it cause cancer if it were transfused into another patient or would white blood cells just destroy it?
Doktor_Wunderbar t1_iv0wzs4 wrote
There are cases of transmissible cancers in animals, but these are mostly in highly bottlenecked populations with low genetic diversity (i.e., the cancer is less likely to seem foreign to a new host).
The few cases in humans involve a degree of immunosuppression.
So like the other poster said, it's not impossible, but it's pretty unlikely.