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Query: UMLS:C0001430 (
adenoma
)
21,222
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The reproducibility of microsatellite instability from different regions of the same sporadic colon cancer has not been addressed. We therefore microdissected and extracted DNA from three to nine separate regions of 13 highly unstable sporadic colon cancers. Each region was then evaluated by polymerase chain reaction amplification of 17 microsatellites: 10 tetranucleotide repeats, 2 noncoding mononucleotide repeats (BAT-26 and BAT-40), and 5 coding mononucleotide repeats (TGFBRII, BAX, MSH3,
MSH6
, IGFIIR). Microsatellite instability showed 100% regional reproducibility with respect to either the panel of 10 tetranucleotide repeats or BAT-26, and nearly 100% reproducibility with BAT-40, although regional variation in the percent instability and the size of unstable alleles was present. TGFBRII was more frequently mutated than any other coding mononucleotide repeat; frame shifts in this gene were identified in nearly every region of every tumor. Each of the five coding repeats showed regional variability in at least one tumor, and 10 of the 13 tumors showed variability with at least one coding repeat. This variability took the form of different mutant alleles (TGFBRII, BAX, MSH3) or mutations present in some but not all regions of a tumor (
MSH6
, IGFIIR, BAX, MSH3). We conclude that the regional reproducibility of generalized microsatellite instability as measured by noncoding repeats indicates that sampling is not a problem in these highly unstable tumors, and that the mismatch repair deficiency phenotype is acquired in the very late
adenoma
stage or early cancer stage of sporadic colonic tumorigenesis. The high frequency of TGFBRII mutations is consistent with acquisition of these mutations at a similar stage of tumorigenesis. The regional variability with respect to the presence or absence of a mutation in the other four coding mononucleotide repeats could lead to sampling error and is consistent with a somewhat later time of acquisition of these mutations. Genes Chromosomes Cancer 26:106-114, 1999.
...
PMID:Regional reproducibility of microsatellite instability in sporadic colorectal cancer. 1046 48
Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is caused by a germline mutation in one of several DNA repair genes, which in the tumors is reflected as microsatellite instability (MSI). MSI+ tumors have been found to carry somatic frameshift mutations in mononucleotide repeats within the coding regions of several genes involved in growth control, apoptosis, and DNA repair, e.g., TGFBRII, BAX, IGFIIR, TCF4, MSH3, and
MSH6
. We have studied the occurrence of somatic frameshift alterations in these mononucleotide repeat-containing genes in 24 tumors (15 colorectal cancers, 1 colon
adenoma
, 4 endometrial cancers, 1 ovarian cancer, 1 gastric cancer, 1 urothelial cancer, and 1 duodenal cancer) from 14 individuals in an HNPCC family with germline hMSH2 mutation. Such somatic frameshift mutations occurred at a variable frequency; the long mononucleotide repeats that characterize intronic MSI markers were mutated in the majority of tumors, 13 of the tumors displayed alterations in the (A)(10) tract of TGFBII, eight tumors (all of gastrointestinal origin) had alterations in the (A)(9) repeat of TCF4, and one to five tumors had somatic frameshift alterations in the shorter mononucleotide repeats of IGFIIR, BAX, MSH3, and
MSH6
. Thus, longer mononucleotide repeats were more frequently affected by somatic frameshift mutations. The pattern of alterations varied between the tumors from different family members as well as between different tumors from the same individual. To what extent this variable pattern depends on the widespread mismatch repair deficiency induced by the underlying MSH2 mutation, or represents alternative ways whereby the tumors can achieve a tumorigenic phenotype, is unknown. We suggest, however, that the accumulation of somatic frameshifts, rather than the specific loci in which these occur, drives the development of the tumorigenic phenotype in HNPCC.
...
PMID:Somatic frameshift alterations in mononucleotide repeat-containing genes in different tumor types from an HNPCC family with germline MSH2 mutation. 1091 91
Mutations of the mismatch repair (MMR) genes MLH1 and MSH2 are associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC), a highly penetrant autosomal dominant condition characterized by hypermutability of short tandemly repeated sequences in tumor DNA. Mutations of another MMR gene,
MSH6
, seem to be less common than MLH1 and MSH2 defects, and have been mostly observed in atypical HNPCC families, characterized by a weaker tumor family history, higher age at disease onset, and low degrees of microsatellite instability (MSI), predominantly involving mononucleotide runs. We have investigated the
MSH6
gene sequence in the peripheral blood of 4 HNPCC and 20 atypical HNPCC probands. Two frameshift mutations within exon 4 were detected in 2 patients. One mutation was found in a proband from a typical HNPCC family, who had developed a colorectal cancer (CRC), a gastric cancer and a rectal
adenoma
. The CRC and the
adenoma
showed mild MSI limited to mononucleotide tracts, while the gastric carcinoma was microsatellite stable. The other mutation was detected in an atypical HNPCC proband, whose CRC showed widespread MSI involving both mono- and dinucleotide repeats. The phenotypic variability associated with
MSH6
constitutional mutations represents a complicating factor for the optimization of strategies aimed at identifying candidates to
MSH6
genetic testing.
...
PMID:Mutations of the 'minor' mismatch repair gene MSH6 in typical and atypical hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. 1457 4
Colorectal adenomas occur at younger age, at increased frequency and have a greater tendency for malignant transformation in patients with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC). We performed immunostaining for the mismatch repair proteins MLH1, PMS2, MSH2 and
MSH6
in 35 colorectal adenomas from 26 patients with HNPCC and identified loss of immunostaining in 23/35 (0.66) adenomas. Loss of mismatch repair protein immunostaining was particularly frequent in large (>5 mm) (14/16) and proximally located (13/15) adenomas, whereas the gene mutated--MLH1 or MSH2--and the type of mutation did not seem to affect the results. We conclude that loss of mismatch repair protein immunostaining is detected at a lower rate in adenomas than in carcinomas associated with HNPCC. Adenomatous tissue can thus be used for immunostaining of mismatch repair proteins in clinical investigations of HNPCC, but whereas loss of immunostaining may pinpoint the gene affected and thereby guide mutation analysis, retained staining cannot exclude that the
adenoma
developed as part of the syndrome due to reduced sensitivity. However, the analysis has a greater chance of being informative if large and proximally located adenomas are selected.
...
PMID:Loss of mismatch repair protein immunostaining in colorectal adenomas from patients with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. 1573 75
Heterozygous germline DNA mismatch repair gene mutations are typically associated with HNPCC. Here we report the case of a proband whose father was known for familial adenomatous polyposis. The number of polyps (less than ten) was not typical of polyposis; therefore, the diagnosis of HNPCC was entertained. Microsatellite instability analyses were performed on peripheral blood and biopsy of a right-sided dysplastic
adenoma
. The tumour tissue showed high-grade instability, and subsequently, immunohistochemistry showed that neither MSH2 nor
MSH6
proteins were expressed in tumour cells. Prophylactic colectomy was performed, and an adenocarcinoma developing within the
adenoma
was diagnosed (pT1N0). Genomic DNA analysis revealed a novel mutation in MSH2 as a frameshift mutation in exon 7 (c.1,191_1,192dupG). Both parents of the proband were analyzed for MSH2 and APC mutations, and in the father, a truncating mutation in exon 15 of APC was identified as del3471-3473GAGA. This mutation was found to be present in the proband. His mother was found to bear the MSH2 exon 7 mutation. At follow-up, the proband was diagnosed with fundic, antral and duodenal adenomas (one fundic
adenoma
showed low-grade dysplasia). Several tubular rectal adenomas with low-grade dysplasia were excised. The patient later developed an intra-abdominal desmoid tumour.
...
PMID:Double frameshift mutations in APC and MSH2 in the same individual. 1667 98
In hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) syndrome, more than 90% of the carcinomas show microsatellite instability (MSI) due to a loss of mismatch repair (MMR) function. Although adenomas are very common in HNPCC and demonstrate an accelerated
adenoma
-carcinoma sequence, data about the prevalence and development of MSI in these early neoplastic lesions are lacking. To determine whether MSI and loss of MMR-protein expression are already present in early stages of tumorigenesis and could therefore be used as a screening tool to identify HNPCC patients before they develop an invasive carcinoma, we analyzed 71 adenomas of 36 HNPCC patients during a 5-year follow-up study. These 36 patients were part of a cohort of 122 HNPCC patients who were investigated at the Institute of Pathology, Klinikum Kassel, as part of the multicentric German HNPCC Consortium, which currently serves more than 2,880 registered families. The diagnosis of HNPCC was based either on the detection of a pathogenic germline mutation in the MSH2, MLH1, or
MSH6
genes or in cases where a pathogenic mutation was not found; diagnosis of HNPCC was made, because all patients fulfilled the Amsterdam or Bethesda criteria and revealed a high degree of MSI (MSI-H) as well as loss of one of the MMR proteins by IHC in the cancer tissue. We found that most adenomas (58/71) were MSI-H and had loss of MMR-protein expression. Of the 71 adenomas, 3 were MSI-H with expression of all MMR proteins, and 3 out of 71 displayed loss of a MMR protein with the microsatellites being classified as microsatellite stable (MSS). However, 7 of the 31 adenomas that were located more than 5 cm away from the carcinoma revealed an MSS status (n=6) or low in MSI (n=1) and expressed all MMR proteins. In summary, a significant percentage of HNPCC-associated adenomas (7/31, 22.6%) developing at a distance of more than 5 cm from the corresponding carcinoma did not show the MSI-H MMR-deficient phenotype and expressed all MMR genes. To our knowledge, this is the first study that shows that in most HNPCC patients, the mutator pathway is already detectable in adenomas, but MMR-proficient adenomas can also be found. Therefore, screening for MMR deficiency should not be applied routinely in adenomas with the goal to identify HNPCC patients.
...
PMID:Prevalence of the mismatch-repair-deficient phenotype in colonic adenomas arising in HNPCC patients: results of a 5-year follow-up study. 1646 30
Heterozygous germline DNA mismatch repair gene mutations are typically associated with HNPCC. Here we report the case of a proband whose father was known for familial adenomatous polyposis. The number of polyps (less than ten) was not typical of polyposis; therefore, the diagnosis of HNPCC was entertained. Microsatellite instability analyses were performed on peripheral blood and biopsy of a right-sided dysplastic
adenoma
. The tumor tissue showed high-grade instability, and a subsequent, immunohistochemistry showed that neither MSH2 nor
MSH6
proteins were expressed in tumor cells. Prophylactic colectomy was performed, and an adenocarcinoma developing within the
adenoma
was diagnosed (pT1N0). Genomic DNA analysis revealed a novel mutation in MSH2 as a frameshift mutation in exon 7 (c.1191_1192dupG). Both parents of the proband were analysed for MSH2 and APC mutations, and in the father, a truncating mutation in exon 15 of APC was identified as del3471-3473GAGA. This mutation was found to be present in the proband. His mother was found to bear the MSH2 exon 7 mutation. At the follow-up, the proband was diagnosed with fundic, antral and duodenal adenomas (one fundic
adenoma
showed low-grade dysplasia). Several tubular rectal adenomas with low-grade dysplasia were excised. The patient later developed an intra-abdominal desmoid tumor.
...
PMID:Double frameshift mutations in APC and MSH2 in the same individual. 1583 12
Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is an autosomal-dominant disorder characterized by predisposition to colorectal cancer and extracolonic malignancies, frequent multiple primary tumors in the same patient, and early age of cancer onset. A main clinical variant of Lynch syndrome, Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) is characterized by the association between one or more visceral malignancies, with at least one sebaceous skin tumor or keratoacanthoma. In our study, we have screened a cohort of 538 HNPCC patients, related to 57 HNPCC families, to detect sebaceous skin tumors and keratoacanthomas and the role of mismatch repair (MMR) genes, MLH1, MSH2, and
MSH6
, in their pathogenesis. Among the 57 HNPCC families, we have identified four MTS families and one suspected MTS family, in which sebaceous carcinoma was found in one HNPCC mutation carrier subject who did not show visceral malignancy. In four of these families, linked to two MLH1 mutations and to two MSH2 mutations, biomolecular characterization showed concordance among immunohistochemistry analysis and gene mutations. The evidences of our investigations show that MLH1 and MSH2 gene mutations have an equivalent etiopathological role both for Lynch syndrome and for MTS; hence, we propose a broadened clinical criteria for definition of Lynch syndrome that will include sebaceous
adenoma
, carcinoma, and keratoacanthoma.
...
PMID:Value of MLH1 and MSH2 mutations in the appearance of Muir-Torre syndrome phenotype in HNPCC patients presenting sebaceous gland tumors or keratoacanthomas. 1698 24
Background A 13-year-old girl presented with rectal bleeding and was found to have two colonic carcinomas (stage Dukes' C) and multiple colonic polyps. At the age of 7 years she had widespread hyperpigmented and hypopigmented skin lesions, and had developed medulloblastoma, which was treated with chemotherapy and craniospinal irradiation. At the age of 10 years she had developed acute myelocytic leukemia, M5. She was treated with chemotherapy including sibling bone marrow transplant with busulfan/cyclophosphamide conditioning. A three-generation family history identified no relatives with colonic carcinomas or polyposis. Investigations Immunohistochemical analysis was performed on a sample of colonic
adenoma
. Staining for MLH1 and MSH2 was normal but was absent for
MSH6
. Direct sequencing of
MSH6
was performed in the proband and both parents. Diagnosis Constitutional biallelic mutations in the mismatch repair gene
MSH6
were identified in the proband. Both parents are carriers of one mutation. This is the first individual with biallelic
MSH6
mutations reported with either medulloblastoma or acute myelocytic leukemia. Management Cascade genetic testing and colonoscopic screening for colorectal carcinoma has been offered to relatives carrying one mutation. The proband underwent panproctocolectomy and received adjuvant capecitabine. Identification of constitutional biallelic mismatch repair gene mutations allows the avoidance of chemotherapeutic agents likely to be ineffective and mutagenic in the context of the underlying mismatch repair deficiency. It is important to consider this diagnosis in children presenting with malignancy and abnormal skin pigmentation, even in the absence of a strong family history of tumors.
...
PMID:Medulloblastoma, acute myelocytic leukemia and colonic carcinomas in a child with biallelic MSH6 mutations. 1725 33
Cutaneous sebaceous neoplasia is known to exhibit a high degree of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency leading to microsatellite instability and these tumors can be markers of the Muir-Torre syndrome and internal malignancy. Other tumors, such as colonic carcinoma, show tendencies toward particular histologic features and sites of involvement correlating with MMR deficiency. There are few comprehensive studies of unselected cutaneous sebaceous neoplasms. To address this gap in knowledge, we examined 94 sebaceous neoplasms from 92 patients and 17 sebaceous hyperplasia controls using immunohistochemistry for MLH1, MSH2, and
MSH6
. Our results indicate that MMR deficiency is significantly associated with anatomic location (more frequently in the trunk and extremities as compared with head and neck), tumor type (more often in
adenoma
compared with carcinoma within the head and neck region), and architecture (keratoacanthomalike). No correlation between cystic change and MMR deficiency was noted. Cutaneous sebaceous neoplasia has tendencies toward certain tumor types and anatomic distribution based on MMR status analogous to that seen in colonic carcinomas and other tumors. These may be helpful indicators for further workup for the Muir-Torre syndrome.
...
PMID:Site and tumor type predicts DNA mismatch repair status in cutaneous sebaceous neoplasia. 1855 51
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