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Familial colorectal cancer: eleven years of data from a registry program in Switzerland
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 1193845
Author(s) Kovac, Michal; Laczko, Endre; Haider, Ritva; Jiricny, Josef; Mueller, Hansjakob; Heinimann, Karl; Marra, Giancarlo
Author(s) at UniBasel Heinimann, Karl
Year 2011
Title Familial colorectal cancer: eleven years of data from a registry program in Switzerland
Journal Familial cancer
Volume 10
Number 3
Pages / Article-Number 605-16
Keywords Colorectum, Familial cancer, Lynch syndrome, Mismatch repair, Switzerland
Abstract Deleterious germ-line variants involving the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes have been identified as the cause of the hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer syndrome known as the Lynch syndrome, but in numerous familial clusters of colon cancer, the cause remains obscure. We analyzed data for 235 German-speaking Swiss families with nonpolyposis forms of colorectal cancer (one of the largest and most ethnically homogeneous cohorts of its kind) to identify the phenotypic features of forms that cannot be explained by MMR deficiency. Based on the results of microsatellite instability analysis and immunostaining of proband tumor samples, the kindreds were classified as MMR-proficient (n = 134, 57%) or MMR-deficient (n = 101, 43%). In 81 of the latter kindreds, deleterious germ-line MMR-gene variants have already been found (62 different variants, including 13 that have not been previously reported), confirming the diagnosis of Lynch syndrome. Compared with MMR-deficient kindreds, the 134 who were MMR proficient were less likely to meet the Amsterdam Criteria II regarding autosomal dominant transmission. They also had primary cancers with later onset and colon-segment distribution patterns resembling those of sporadic colorectal cancers, and they had lower frequencies of metachronous colorectal cancers and extracolonic cancers in general. Although the predisposition to colorectal cancer in these kindreds is probably etiologically heterogeneous, we were unable to identify distinct phenotypic subgroups solely on the basis of the clinical data collected in this study. Further insight, however, is expected to emerge from the molecular characterization of their tumors.
Publisher Springer
ISSN/ISBN 1389-9600
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A6004083
Full Text on edoc No
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1007/s10689-011-9458-6
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21671081
ISI-Number WOS:000301507400026
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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