6 results on '"Crosbie E. J."'
Search Results
2. A mismatch in care: results of a United Kingdom-wide patient and clinician survey of gynaecological services for women with Lynch syndrome.
- Author
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Ryan, NAJ, Nobes, M, Sedgewick, D, Teoh, S‐N, Evans, DG, Crosbie, EJ, Teoh, S-N, Evans, D G, and Crosbie, E J
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HEREDITARY nonpolyposis colorectal cancer ,WOMEN'S programs ,ONCOLOGISTS ,PATIENT surveys ,SUPPORT groups ,ENDOMETRIAL cancer - Abstract
Objective: To describe the current testing practice, referral pathways and gynaecological services available to women with Lynch syndrome (LS) in the UK.Design: Cross-sectional nationwide survey of gynaecological oncologists and women with LS.Setting: United Kingdom.Methods: Gynaecological oncologists were contacted directly. Women with LS were identified from national and regional clinical databases and the patient support group, Lynch syndrome UK.Main Outcome Measures: Gynaecological oncologists were asked to report rates of LS testing and current practice regarding risk-reducing strategies and gynaecological surveillance for women with LS. Women with LS were asked to describe their experiences of gynaecological care.Results: In total, 41 gynaecological oncologists and 298 women with LS responded to the survey. Of the gynaecological oncologists surveyed, 37% were unfamiliar with any clinical guidelines for the management of LS. Only 29% of gynaecological oncologists supported universal testing of endometrial cancer for LS; one centre routinely performed such testing. In all, 83% said they perform risk-reducing gynaecological surgery and 43% were aware of a local gynaecological surveillance service for women with LS. Of women with LS, most had undergone a hysterectomy (n = 191/64.1%), most frequently to reduce their gynaecological cancer risk (n = 86/45%). A total of 10% were initially referred for LS testing by their gynaecologist and 55% of those eligible regularly attended gynaecological surveillance; however, 62% wanted more regular surveillance. Regional variation was evident across all standards of care.Conclusions: There is widespread variation in the services offered to women with LS in the UK. As a community, gynaecological oncologists should move towards a nationally agreed provision of services.Tweetable Abstract: A mismatch in care for mismatch repair. Survey finds significant variation in gynaecological care for #Lynchsyndrome in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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3. The vaginal microbiome and gynaecological cancer: exercise caution when considering causation.
- Author
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Ramchander, N. C. and Crosbie, E. J.
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HUMAN microbiota , *CARCINOGENESIS , *PAPILLOMAVIRUSES , *CERVICAL cancer , *HYSTERECTOMY , *SALPINGECTOMY , *OVARIAN cancer , *ENDOMETRIAL cancer - Abstract
The article considers the role of vaginal microbiome in the aetiology of gynecological cancers. Topics discussed are factors that influence the acquisition of genital human papillomavirus (HPV) that are important in the pathogenesis of cervical cancer, efficacy of hysterectomy or salpingectomy with ovarian conservation and tubal ligation in reducing the risk of ovarian cancer, and role of vaginal microbiome in endometrial carcinogenesis.
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- 2018
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4. Uptake of hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in carriers of pathogenic mismatch repair variants:a Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database report
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Einar Andreas Rødland, Joan B. Vida, Heike Görgens, Eivind Hovig, Kirsi Pylvänäinen, Monika Morak, Wouter H. de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, Lone Sunde, Mark A. Jenkins, Lucio Bertario, Patricia Esperon, Reinhard Büttner, Finlay A. Macrae, Inge Bernstein, Marc S. Greenblatt, Wolff Schmiegel, Giulia Martina Cavestro, Maria Grazia Tibiletti, Silke Redler, Zohreh Ketabi, Karl Heinimann, Fiona Lalloo, Huw Thomas, Christina Therkildsen, Deepak Vangala, Magnus von Knebel Doeberitz, Matilde Navarro, Erik Rokkones, Douglas Tjandra, D. G. Evans, Marta Pineda, Marian J.E. Mourits, Lior H. Katz, Bernardo Bonanni, Pablo Kalfayan, Stephen N. Thibodeau, Loic Le Marchand, Revital Kariv, Maartje Nielsen, Emma J Crosbie, Oliver G. Denton, Stefanie Holzapfel, Guy Rosner, Mev Dominguez-Valentin, John Burn, Verena Steinke-Lange, Carlos A. Vaccaro, Gabriela Möslein, Elke Holinski-Feder, Gabriel Capellá, Johanna Tecklenburg, Karin Wadt, Kate Green, Christoph Engel, Miriam Mints, Anna Lepistö, Tamara Alejandra Piñero, Jukka-Pekka Mecklin, John L. Hopper, Robert Hüneburg, Markus Loeffler, Florencia Neffa, Toni T. Seppälä, Claudia Perne, Polly A. Newcomb, Karin Alvarez, Adriana Della Valle, Julian R. Sampson, Sanne W. ten Broeke, Francisco Lopez-Koestner, John-Paul Plazzer, James Hill, Hans Georg Strauß, Ingrid Winship, Nathan Gluck, Aung Ko Win, Jane C. Figueiredo, Jürgen Weitz, Hans F. A. Vasen, Rolf H. Sijmons, Walter Hernán Pavicic, Stefan Aretz, Steven Gallinger, Noralane M. Lindor, Pål Møller, Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo, Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS), Damage and Repair in Cancer Development and Cancer Treatment (DARE), Targeted Gynaecologic Oncology (TARGON), Seppala, T. T., Dominguez-Valentin, M., Crosbie, E. J., Engel, C., Aretz, S., Macrae, F., Winship, I., Capella, G., Thomas, H., Hovig, E., Nielsen, M., Sijmons, R. H., Bertario, L., Bonanni, B., Tibiletti, M. G., Cavestro, G. M., Mints, M., Gluck, N., Katz, L., Heinimann, K., Vaccaro, C. A., Green, K., Lalloo, F., Hill, J., Schmiegel, W., Vangala, D., Perne, C., Strauss, H. -G., Tecklenburg, J., Holinski-Feder, E., Steinke-Lange, V., Mecklin, J. -P., Plazzer, J. -P., Pineda, M., Navarro, M., Vida, J. B., Kariv, R., Rosner, G., Pinero, T. A., Pavicic, W., Kalfayan, P., ten Broeke, S. W., Jenkins, M. A., Sunde, L., Bernstein, I., Burn, J., Greenblatt, M., de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, W. H., Della Valle, A., Lopez-Koestner, F., Alvarez, K., Buttner, R., Gorgens, H., Morak, M., Holzapfel, S., Huneburg, R., von Knebel Doeberitz, M., Loeffler, M., Redler, S., Weitz, J., Pylvanainen, K., Renkonen-Sinisalo, L., Lepisto, A., Hopper, J. L., Win, A. K., Lindor, N. M., Gallinger, S., Le Marchand, L., Newcomb, P. A., Figueiredo, J. C., Thibodeau, S. N., Therkildsen, C., Wadt, K. A. W., Mourits, M. J. E., Ketabi, Z., Denton, O. G., Rodland, E. A., Vasen, H., Neffa, F., Esperon, P., Tjandra, D., Moslein, G., Rokkones, E., Sampson, J. R., Evans, D. G., Moller, P., Genome-Scale Biology (GSB) Research Program, HUS Abdominal Center, Clinicum, II kirurgian klinikka, Department of Surgery, and Doctoral Programme in Clinical Research
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Oophorectomy ,Databases, Factual ,Colorectal cancer ,SURGERY ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Càncer d'ovari ,computer.software_genre ,DNA Mismatch Repair ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endometrial cancer ,munasarjasyöpä ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Colectomy ,Salpingo-oophorectomy/methods ,Database ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,COLON-CANCER ,MLH1 ,WOMEN ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Lynch syndrome ,3. Good health ,kohdunrungon syöpä ,Oncology ,COLECTOMY ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics ,Adult ,Heterozygote ,Genital Neoplasms, Female ,Salpingo-oophorectomy ,Hysterectomy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genital Neoplasms, Female/prevention & control ,Ovarian cancer ,Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis/genetics ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Mortalitat ,Humans ,Hysterectomy/methods ,Mortality ,Lynchin oireyhtymä ,Risk-reducing surgery ,Aged ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,Cancer ,MSH6 ,3126 Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology ,medicine.disease ,Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis ,MSH2 ,030104 developmental biology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,PMS2 ,Càncer d'endometri ,Mutation ,kohdunpoisto ,business ,computer ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to report the uptake of hysterectomy and/or bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) to prevent gynaecological cancers (risk-reducing surgery [RRS]) in carriers of pathogenic MMR (path_MMR) variants.Methods: The Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database (PLSD) was used to investigate RRS by a cross-sectional study in 2292 female path_MMR carriers aged 30-69 years.Results: Overall, 144, 79, and 517 carriers underwent risk-reducing hysterectomy, BSO, or both combined, respectively. Two-thirds of procedures before 50 years of age were combined hysterectomy and BSO, and 81% of all procedures included BSO. Risk-reducing hysterectomy was performed before age 50 years in 28%, 25%, 15%, and 9%, and BSO in 26%, 25%, 14% and 13% of path_MLH1, path_MSH2, path_MSH6, and path_PMS2 carriers, respectively. Before 50 years of age, 107 of 188 (57%) BSO and 126 of 204 (62%) hysterectomies were performed in women without any prior cancer, and only 5% (20/392) were performed simultaneously with colorectal cancer (CRC) surgery.Conclusion: Uptake of RRS before 50 years of age was low, and RRS was rarely undertaken in association with surgical treatment of CRC. Uptake of RRS aligned poorly with gene-and age-associated risk estimates for endometrial or ovarian cancer that were published recently from PLSD and did not correspond well with current clinical guidelines. The reasons should be clarified. Decision-making on opting for or against RRS and its timing should be better aligned with predicted risk and mortality for endometrial and ovarian cancer in Lynch syn-drome to improve outcomes. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.
- Published
- 2021
5. Risk-reducing hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy in female heterozygotes of pathogenic mismatch repair variants: a Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database report
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Eivind Hovig, Bernardo Bonanni, Monika Morak, Mark A. Jenkins, Patricia Esperon, Toni T. Seppälä, Lone Sunde, Pablo Kalfayan, Gabriel Capellá, Inge Bernstein, Matilde Navarro, Marc S. Greenblatt, John Burn, Zohreh Ketabi, Johanna Tecklenburg, Francisco Lopez-Koestner, Miriam Mints, Heike Görgens, Neil A J Ryan, Kate Green, Annika Auranen, Douglas Tjandra, Robert W. Haile, Marta Pineda, Tamara Alejandra Piñero, Stefan Aretz, Robert Hüneburg, Verena Steinke-Lange, Markus Loeffler, Christina Therkildsen, John L. Hopper, Deepak Vangala, Huw Thomas, Reinhard Büttner, James Hill, Einar Andreas Rødland, Revital Kariv, Maria Grazia Tibiletti, Sigve Nakken, Stefanie Holzapfel, D. Gareth Evans, Oliver G. Denton, Julian R. Sampson, Henrik Okkels, Joan Vidal, Loic Le Marchand, Hans Georg Strauß, Gabriela Möslein, Claudia Perne, Ingrid Winship, Nathan Gluck, Jane C. Figueiredo, Mev Dominguez-Valentin, Wolff Schmiegel, Karl Heinimann, Kirsi Pylvänäinen, Karin Alvarez, Maartje Nielsen, Wouter H. de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, Fiona Lalloo, Aung Ko Win, Guy Rosner, Carlos A. Vaccaro, Polly A. Newcomb, Elke Holinski-Feder, John-Paul Plazzer, Lior H. Katz, Christoph Engel, Anna Lepistö, Jukka-Pekka Mecklin, Giulia Martina Cavestro, Adriana Della Valle, Finlay A. Macrae, Sanne W. ten Broeke, Florencia Neffa, Rolf H. Sijmons, María Laura Gonzalez, Nils Rahner, Jürgen Weitz, Hans F. A. Vasen, Stephen N. Thibodeau, Emma J Crosbie, Lucio Bertario, Steven Gallinger, Noralane M. Lindor, Pål Møller, Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo, Magnus von Knebel Doeberitz, Dominguez-Valentin, M., Crosbie, E. J., Engel, C., Aretz, S., Macrae, F., Winship, I., Capella, G., Thomas, H., Nakken, S., Hovig, E., Nielsen, M., Sijmons, R. H., Bertario, L., Bonanni, B., Tibiletti, M. G., Cavestro, G. M., Mints, M., Gluck, N., Katz, L., Heinimann, K., Vaccaro, C. A., Green, K., Lalloo, F., Hill, J., Schmiegel, W., Vangala, D., Perne, C., Strauss, H. -G., Tecklenburg, J., Holinski-Feder, E., Steinke-Lange, V., Mecklin, J. -P., Plazzer, J. -P., Pineda, M., Navarro, M., Vidal, J. B., Kariv, R., Rosner, G., Pinero, T. A., Gonzalez, M. L., Kalfayan, P., Ryan, N., ten Broeke, S. W., Jenkins, M. A., Sunde, L., Bernstein, I., Burn, J., Greenblatt, M., de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, W. H., Della Valle, A., Lopez-Koestner, F., Alvarez, K., Buttner, R., Gorgens, H., Morak, M., Holzapfel, S., Huneburg, R., von Knebel Doeberitz, M., Loeffler, M., Rahner, N., Weitz, J., Pylvanainen, K., Renkonen-Sinisalo, L., Lepisto, A., Auranen, A., Hopper, J. L., Win, A. K., Haile, R. W., Lindor, N. M., Gallinger, S., Le Marchand, L., Newcomb, P. A., Figueiredo, J. C., Thibodeau, S. N., Therkildsen, C., Okkels, H., Ketabi, Z., Denton, O. G., Rodland, E. A., Vasen, H., Neffa, F., Esperon, P., Tjandra, D., Moslein, G., Sampson, J. R., Evans, D. G., Seppala, T. T., Moller, P., ATG - Applied Tumor Genomics, HUS Abdominal Center, II kirurgian klinikka, Department of Surgery, Clinicum, Helsinki University Hospital Area, and University of Helsinki
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,DNA Mismatch Repair ,Gynecologic surgery ,0302 clinical medicine ,Malalties hereditàries ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mismatch Repair Endonuclease PMS2 ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,16. Peace & justice ,Lynch syndrome ,3. Good health ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,syöpätaudit ,MutL Protein Homolog 1 ,Genetic diseases ,Heterozygote ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Salpingo-oophorectomy ,Cirurgia ginecològica ,Hysterectomy ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Càncer colorectal ,CAPP2 ,medicine ,Humans ,Lynchin oireyhtymä ,Gynecology ,perinnölliset taudit ,HEREDITARY COLORECTAL-CANCER ,business.industry ,Endometrial cancer ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis ,Colorectal cancer ,ASPIRIN ,030104 developmental biology ,Clinical research ,3121 General medicine, internal medicine and other clinical medicine ,kohdunpoisto ,3111 Biomedicine ,Ovarian cancer ,business - Abstract
Purpose To determine impact of risk-reducing hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO) on gynecological cancer incidence and death in heterozygotes of pathogenic MMR ( path_MMR ) variants. Methods The Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database was used to investigate the effects of gynecological risk-reducing surgery (RRS) at different ages. Results Risk-reducing hysterectomy at 25 years of age prevents endometrial cancer before 50 years in 15%, 18%, 13%, and 0% of path_MLH1 , path_MSH2 , path_MSH6 , and path_PMS2 heterozygotes and death in 2%, 2%, 1%, and 0%, respectively. Risk-reducing BSO at 25 years of age prevents ovarian cancer before 50 years in 6%, 11%, 2%, and 0% and death in 1%, 2%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. Risk-reducing hysterectomy at 40 years prevents endometrial cancer by 50 years in 13%, 16%, 11%, and 0% and death in 1%, 2%, 1%, and 0%, respectively. BSO at 40 years prevents ovarian cancer before 50 years in 4%, 8%, 0%, and 0%, and death in 1%, 1%, 0%, and 0%, respectively. Conclusion Little benefit is gained by performing RRS before 40 years of age and premenopausal BSO in path_MSH6 and path_PMS2 heterozygotes has no measurable benefit for mortality. These findings may aid decision making for women with LS who are considering RRS.
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- 2021
6. Correction:Cancer risks by gene, age, and gender in 6350 carriers of pathogenic mismatch repair variants: findings from the Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database
- Author
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Gabriel Capellá, Patricia Esperon, Christoph Engel, Rolf H. Sijmons, María Laura Gonzalez, Matilde Navarro, Francisco López-Köstner, Julian R. Sampson, Miquel Serra-Burriel, Karin Alvarez, Ingrid Winship, Nathan Gluck, Lone Sunde, Reinhard Büttner, Giulia Martina Cavestro, Wouter H. de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, Jukka-Pekka Mecklin, Marc S. Greenblatt, Kate Green, Robert Hüneburg, Markus Loeffler, Maria Grazia Tibiletti, Tamara Alejandra Piñero, Florencia Neffa, Lucio Bertario, Ariadna Sánchez, Verena Steinke-Lange, Christina Therkildsen, Jane C. Figueiredo, Douglas Tjandra, Magnus von Knebel Doeberitz, Lior H. Katz, Steven Gallinger, Noralane M. Lindor, Gabriela Möslein, Adriana Della Valle, John L. Hopper, Einar Andreas Rødland, Miriam Mints, Annika Lindblom, Ian M. Frayling, Polly A. Newcomb, Pål Møller, Sanne W. ten Broeke, Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo, Sigve Nakken, Stefanie Holzapfel, Finlay A. Macrae, Stefan Aretz, Nils Rahner, Karin Wadt, Robert W. Haile, Francesc Balaguer, Revital Kariv, Stephen N. Thibodeau, Huw D. Thomas, Emma J Crosbie, Deepak Vangala, Monika Morak, Ignacio Blanco, Hans K. Schackert, Henrik Okkels, Mev Dominguez-Valentin, Oliver G. Denton, John-Paul Plazzer, Zohreh Ketabi, James Hill, Loic Le Marchand, Mark A. Jenkins, Inge Bernstein, D. Gareth Evans, Heike Görgens, Marta Pineda, John Burn, Kirsi Pylvänäinen, Eivind Hovig, Hans F. A. Vasen, Pablo Kalfayan, Toni T. Seppälä, Aung Ko Win, Maartje Nielsen, Wolff Schmiegel, Guy Rosner, Karl Heinimann, Fiona Lalloo, Carlos A. Vaccaro, Elke Holinski-Feder, Leticia Moreira, HUS Abdominal Center, Clinicum, II kirurgian klinikka, University of Helsinki, Department of Surgery, ATG - Applied Tumor Genomics, Research Programs Unit, Dominguez-Valentin, M., Sampson, J. R., Seppala, T. T., ten Broeke, S. W., Plazzer, J. -P., Nakken, S., Engel, C., Aretz, S., Jenkins, M. A., Sunde, L., Bernstein, I., Capella, G., Balaguer, F., Thomas, H., Evans, D. G., Burn, J., Greenblatt, M., Hovig, E., de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel, W. H., Sijmons, R. H., Bertario, L., Tibiletti, M. G., Cavestro, G. M., Lindblom, A., Della Valle, A., Lopez-Kostner, F., Gluck, N., Katz, L. H., Heinimann, K., Vaccaro, C. A., Buttner, R., Gorgens, H., Holinski-Feder, E., Morak, M., Holzapfel, S., Huneburg, R., Knebel Doeberitz, M., Loeffler, M., Rahner, N., Schackert, H. K., Steinke-Lange, V., Schmiegel, W., Vangala, D., Pylvanainen, K., Renkonen-Sinisalo, L., Hopper, J. L., Win, A. K., Haile, R. W., Lindor, N. M., Gallinger, S., Le Marchand, L., Newcomb, P. A., Figueiredo, J. C., Thibodeau, S. N., Wadt, K., Therkildsen, C., Okkels, H., Ketabi, Z., Moreira, L., Sanchez, A., Serra-Burriel, M., Pineda, M., Navarro, M., Blanco, I., Green, K., Lalloo, F., Crosbie, E. J., Hill, J., Denton, O. G., Frayling, I. M., Rodland, E. A., Vasen, H., Mints, M., Neffa, F., Esperon, P., Alvarez, K., Kariv, R., Rosner, G., Pinero, T. A., Gonzalez, M. L., Kalfayan, P., Tjandra, D., Winship, I. M., Macrae, F., Moslein, G., Mecklin, J. -P., Nielsen, M., Moller, P., and Guided Treatment in Optimal Selected Cancer Patients (GUTS)
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Oncology ,Male ,Colorectal cancer ,Lynch syndrome ,Penetrance ,DNA Mismatch Repair ,0302 clinical medicine ,Databases, Genetic ,Malalties hereditàries ,Prospective Studies ,Càncer ,PMS2 ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mismatch Repair Endonuclease PMS2 ,Cancer ,0303 health sciences ,Sex Characteristics ,Factors de risc en les malalties ,1184 Genetics, developmental biology, physiology ,MLH1 ,Middle Aged ,16. Peace & justice ,3. Good health ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,MutS Homolog 2 Protein ,syöpägeenit ,MSH2 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,MSH6 ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,DNA mismatch repair ,Female ,geneettiset tekijät ,MutL Protein Homolog 1 ,Genetic diseases ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Risk factors in diseases ,suolistosyövät ,MUTATION CARRIERS ,Risk Assessment ,Article ,sukupuoli ,Age and gender ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Lynchin oireyhtymä ,Gene ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,business.industry ,Endometrial cancer ,Correction ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,medicine.disease ,Colorectal Neoplasms, Hereditary Nonpolyposis ,Survival Analysis ,digestive system diseases ,Mutation ,3111 Biomedicine ,ikä ,business ,Ovarian cancer - Abstract
Lynch syndrome (LS) results from pathogenic variants in the mismatch repair (MMR) genes and is the most common hereditary cancer syndrome, affecting an estimated 1 in 300 individuals. Pathogenic variants in each of the MMR genes path_MLH1, path_MSH2, path_MSH6, and path_PMS2 result in different risks for cancers in organs including the colorectum, endometrium, ovaries, stomach, small bowel, bile duct, pancreas, and upper urinary tract. Accurate estimates of these risks are essential for planning appropriate approaches to the prevention or early diagnosis of cancers but the robustness of previous studies has been limited by factors including retrospective design,1,2 lack of validation in independent cohorts,3-5 and inconsistent classification of genetic variants. Unexpected findings from previous studies have included path_MLH1 and path_MSH2 carriers appearing to have a lifetime risk of colorectal cancer (CRC) of approximately 50%, despite surveillance colonoscopy,6-8 and that shorter intervals between colonoscopies do not seem to reduce the incidence of CRC in LS.9,10 These findings challenge the assumptions that CRC in LS usually develops from a noninfiltrative adenoma precursor and that CRC can be prevented by colonoscopic detection and removal of adenomas in the colon and rectum. Additionally, previous studies in the Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database (PLSD) have shown no increase in cancer risk in path_PMS2 carriers before 40 years of age and, although observation years were limited in older path_PMS2 carriers, LS-associated cancers other than endometrial and prostate were not observed.6-8 In this study we collected prospective data from a new large cohort of path_MMR carriers to validate previous findings from PLSD. We also updated information on the original cohort to ensure consistent classification of pathogenicity of MMR gene variants. We then combined both data sets, providing larger numbers that allowed us to derive more precise risk estimates for cancers in LS categorized by gene and gender.
- Published
- 2020
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