Incidence of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and the feasibility of molecular screening for the disease.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
1998
Citazione:
Incidence of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and the feasibility of molecular screening for the disease / Aaltonen, L. A.; Salovaara, R.; Kristo, P.; Canzian, F.; Hemminki, A.; Peltomäki, P.; Chadwick, R. B.; Kääriäinen, H.; Eskelinen, M.; Järvinen, H.; Mecklin, J. P.; De La, Chapelle; Percesepe, Antonio; A., Ahtola; H., Härkönen; N., Julkunen; R., Kangas; E., Ojala; S., Tulikoura; J., Valkamo. - In: THE NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE. - ISSN 0028-4793. - STAMPA. - 338:(1998), pp. 1481-1487. [10.1056/NEJM199805213382101]
Abstract:
Background
Genetic disorders that predispose
people to colorectal cancer include the polyposis
syndromes and hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal
cancer. In contrast to the polyposis syndromes, hereditary
nonpolyposis colorectal cancer lacks distinctive
clinical features. However, a germ-line mutation
of DNA mismatch-repair genes is a characteristic
molecular feature of the disease. Since clinical screening
of carriers of such mutations can help prevent
cancer, it is important to devise strategies applicable
to molecular screening for this disease.
Methods
We prospectively screened tumor specimens
obtained from 509 consecutive patients with
colorectal adenocarcinomas for DNA replication
errors, which are characteristic of hereditary colorectal
cancers. These replication errors were detected
through microsatellite-marker analyses of tumor DNA.
DNA from normal tissue from the patients with replication
errors was screened for germ-line mutations
of the mismatch-repair genes
MLH1
and
MSH2.
Results
Among the 509 patients, 63 (12 percent)
had replication errors. Specimens of normal tissue
from 10 of these 63 patients had a germ-line mutation
of
MLH1
or
MSH2.
Of these 10 patients (2 percent
of the 509 patients), 9 had a first-degree relative
with endometrial or colorectal cancer, 7 were under
50 years of age, and 4 had had colorectal or endometrial
cancer previously.
Conclusions
In this series of patients with colorectal
cancer in Finland, at least 2 percent had hereditary
nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. We recommend
testing for replication errors in all patients
with colorectal cancer who meet one or more of the
following criteria: a family history of colorectal or endometrial
cancer, an age of less than 50 years, and a
history of multiple colorectal or endometrial cancers.
Patients found to have replication errors should
undergo further analysis for germ-line mutations in
DNA mismatch-repair genes.
Tipologia CRIS:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
HNPCC; mismatch repair genes; cancer incidence
Elenco autori:
Aaltonen, L. A.; Salovaara, R.; Kristo, P.; Canzian, F.; Hemminki, A.; Peltomäki, P.; Chadwick, R. B.; Kääriäinen, H.; Eskelinen, M.; Järvinen, H.; Mecklin, J. P.; De La, Chapelle; Percesepe, Antonio; A., Ahtola; H., Härkönen; N., Julkunen; R., Kangas; E., Ojala; S., Tulikoura; J., Valkamo
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