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Query: UMLS:C0476089 (
endometrial cancer
)
11,379
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a woman at the age of 30,
carcinoma of the endometrium
was diagnosed after hysteroscopic polypectomy. Her family history fulfilled Bethesda diagnostic criteria for
Lynch syndrome
or
hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer
. Conservative treatment was chosen based on the tumor grade, her age, and her desire for pregnancy. Three months after high-dose progesterone treatment successful conception was achieved. In this report, we suggest that individual approach should be considered in young women with low-grade
endometrial carcinoma
, positive family history, and unfulfilled motherhood.
...
PMID:Successful pregnancy after hysteroscopic removal of grade I endometrial carcinoma in a young woman with Lynch syndrome. 1651 42
Mutations within the DNA mismatch repair gene, "postmeiotic segregation increased 2" (PMS2), have been associated with a predisposition to hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (
HNPCC
;
Lynch syndrome
). The presence of a large family of highly homologous PMS2 pseudogenes has made previous attempts to sequence PMS2 very difficult. Here, we describe a novel method that utilizes long-range PCR as a way to preferentially amplify PMS2 and not the pseudogenes. A second, exon-specific, amplification from diluted long-range products enables us to obtain a clean sequence that shows no evidence of pseudogene contamination. This method has been used to screen a cohort of patients whose tumors were negative for the PMS2 protein by immunohistochemistry and had not shown any mutations within the MLH1 gene. Sequencing of the PMS2 gene from 30 colorectal and 11
endometrial cancer
patients identified 10 novel sequence changes as well as 17 sequence changes that had previously been identified. In total, putative pathologic mutations were detected in 11 of the 41 families. Among these were five novel mutations, c.705+1G>T, c.736_741del6ins11, c.862_863del, c.1688G>T, and c.2007-1G>A. We conclude that PMS2 mutation detection in selected
Lynch syndrome
and
Lynch syndrome
-like patients is both feasible and desirable.
...
PMID:Long-range PCR facilitates the identification of PMS2-specific mutations. 1713 68
Endometrial cancer
is the most common cancer in women with
Lynch syndrome
. The identification of individuals with
Lynch syndrome
is desirable because they can benefit from increased cancer surveillance. The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility and desirability of molecular screening for
Lynch syndrome
in all
endometrial cancer
patients. Unselected
endometrial cancer
patients (N = 543) were studied. All tumors underwent microsatellite instability (MSI) testing. Patients with MSI-positive tumors underwent testing for germ line mutations in MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2. Of 543 tumors studied, 118 (21.7%) were MSI positive (98 of 118 MSI high and 20 of 118 MSI low). All 118 patients with MSI-positive tumors had mutation testing, and nine of them had deleterious germ line mutations (one MLH1, three MSH2, and five MSH6). In addition, one case with an MSI-negative tumor had abnormal MSH6 immunohistochemical staining and was subsequently found to have a mutation in MSH6. Immunohistochemical staining was consistent with the mutation result in all seven truncating mutation-positive cases but was not consistent in two of the three missense mutation cases. We conclude that in central Ohio, at least 1.8% (95% confidence interval, 0.9-3.5%) of newly diagnosed
endometrial cancer
patients had
Lynch syndrome
. Seven of the 10
Lynch syndrome
patients did not meet any published criteria for hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, and six of them were diagnosed at age >50. Studying all
endometrial cancer
patients for
Lynch syndrome
using a combination of MSI and immunohistochemistry for molecular prescreening followed by gene sequencing and deletion analysis is feasible and may be desirable.
...
PMID:Screening for Lynch syndrome (hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer) among endometrial cancer patients. 1790 73
Lynch syndrome
(hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer) is characterised by the development of colorectal cancer,
endometrial cancer
and various other cancers, and is caused by a mutation in one of the mismatch repair genes: MLH1, MSH2, MSH6 or PMS2. The discovery of these genes, 15 years ago, has led to the identification of large numbers of affected families. In April 2006, a workshop was organised by a group of European experts in hereditary gastrointestinal cancer (the Mallorca-group), aiming to establish guidelines for the clinical management of
Lynch syndrome
. 21 experts from nine European countries participated in this workshop. Prior to the meeting, various participants prepared the key management issues of debate according to the latest publications. A systematic literature search using Pubmed and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews reference lists of retrieved articles and manual searches of relevant articles was performed. During the workshop, all recommendations were discussed in detail. Because most of the studies that form the basis for the recommendations were descriptive and/or retrospective in nature, many of them were based on expert opinion. The guidelines described in this manuscript may be helpful for the appropriate management of families with
Lynch syndrome
. Prospective controlled studies should be undertaken to improve further the care of these families.
...
PMID:Guidelines for the clinical management of Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis cancer). 1732 85
In 1983, Bokhman proposed a dualistic model of endometrial tumorigenesis based on the clinical observations and clinicopathologic correlations. The majority of endometrial cancers (approximately 70-80%), designated as type I carcinomas, follow the estrogen-related pathway. Histologically, most of the type I tumors seem to arise in the background of hyperplastic endometrium, show an endometrioid differentiation, and are of low grade. Clinically, they are overall characterized by a favorable behavior. Another 10-20% of endometrial cancers, designated as type II carcinomas, follow the estrogen-unrelated pathway and arise in the background of atrophic endometrium. Type II tumors usually occur at an older age, approximately 5-10 years later than type I tumors. They are typically high-grade carcinomas of nonendometrioid differentiation, most frequently serous, less frequently clear cell. Type II carcinomas behave as an aggressive clinical course and poor prognosis. This dualistic model was subsequently supported by the molecular studies, approximately a decade later. At present, endometrioid and serous carcinoma, which represent the major phenotypes of types I and II endometrial carcinomas, respectively, are characterized by distinctive types of genetic instability and molecular alterations. In endometrioid (type I) carcinoma, four major genetic changes are responsible for the tumorigenesis, i.e. silencing of PTEN tumor suppressor gene, presence of microsatellite instability due to alterations of the mismatch repair genes, mutation of K-ras protooncogene, and alteration of beta-catenin gene. On the other hand, p53 mutation and overexpression of Her2/neu oncogene are two major genetic alterations in serous and clear cell (type II) carcinomas. However, like in any model, there is evidence for exceptions. Many endometrial carcinomas are in the gray zone with overlapping clinical, morphologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular features of types I and II endometrial cancers. Finally, a small group of
endometrial carcinoma
is noted to be hereditary. It is known as the most common extracolonic malignancy in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (
Lynch syndrome
), an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder of cancer susceptibility. Inactivation of the mismatch repair genes MSH2 and MSH6 seems to play a central role in the tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Molecular carcinogenesis of endometrial cancer. 1738 85
Endometrial cancer
diagnosed at a relatively young age or in a patient with a medical history of colorectal cancer may be indicative of
Lynch syndrome
. Four women, aged 43, 60, 41 and 54 respectively, with a family history of endometrial or colorectal neoplasm were examined for microsatellite instability (MSI) in tumour tissue with positive results. Subsequently, a mutation was found in one of the DNA mismatch repair genes.
Lynch syndrome
, also known as hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC), is caused by a germline mutation in a mismatch repair gene and is an autosomal dominant disorder that is characterized by the development of
carcinoma of the endometrium
and colorectum at a relatively young age. Until recently, recognition of
Lynch syndrome
was mainly based on an, often incomplete, family history, but today the presence of MSI in tumour tissue can be used to identify patients at risk for
Lynch syndrome
. A pathologist can contribute to identifying a patient at risk for
Lynch syndrome
by initiating MSI testing when: (a)
endometrial cancer
is diagnosed under the age of 50, (b) a combination of
endometrial cancer
and colorectal cancer is diagnosed under the age of 70.
...
PMID:[Recognition of congenital endometrial carcinoma: the importance of family history and investigation of microsatellite instability in the tumour]. 1763 70
The main cancer susceptibility syndromes that involve gynecologic cancers include Breast-Ovarian Cancer Syndrome and
Lynch Syndrome
/Hereditary Non-polyposis Colorectal Cancer Syndrome. For uterine cancer, approximately 5% of all cases are likely due to a hereditary cause and for ovarian cancer, approximately 10% are due to an inherited cause. Gynecologic oncologists play an important role in identifying women with ovarian or
endometrial cancer
who may have these syndromes. Personal and family history of relevant cancers assists with identification. For those women without cancer who are found to have a hereditary cancer syndrome, effective counseling in the prevention and early detection of cancers is crucial.
...
PMID:Hereditary gynecologic cancers: differential diagnosis, surveillance, management and surgical prophylaxis. 1763 27
Data reduction is often desired in the development of a prediction model, for example for effects of age and family history in the identification of subjects having a genetic mutation. We aimed to evaluate a strategy for model simplification by robust coding of related predictors. We considered 898 patients suspected of having
Lynch syndrome
, which is caused primarily by mutations in the mismatch repair genes, MLH1 or MSH2. The presence of colorectal cancer (CRC) and
endometrial cancer
in patients and their relatives was related to mutation prevalence with logistic regression analysis. The performances of simplified and more complex models were quantified with a concordance statistic (c), which was corrected for optimism by cross-validation and bootstrapping. External validation was performed in 1016 patients. The first challenge was the coding of age at diagnosis of CRC, where we forced effects to be identical in patients, in 1st degree and in 2nd degree relatives, by taking the sum of the ages at diagnosis. As a further simplification, CRC diagnosis in 2nd degree relatives was weighted half that of 1st degree relatives. These data reduction approaches were also followed for
endometrial cancer
. The simplified model used 7 instead of 17 degrees of freedom (df) for a more complex model incorporating individual predictor effects. The optimism-corrected c was higher (0.79 instead of 0.77), but the external c was similar (0.78 for the simplified and more complex models). A stepwise selected model performed slightly worse (external c=0.77). In conclusion, a prediction model could be developed with relatively few df that captured effects of age at diagnosis across patients and relatives per type of cancer in the family. Such robust coding may especially be relevant for modeling in relatively small data sets.
...
PMID:Data reduction for prediction: a case study on robust coding of age and family history for the risk of having a genetic mutation. 1794 67
Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is an autosomal dominant disease, characterized by the occurrence of predominantly colon and
endometrial cancer
and, less frequently, cancer of the small bowel, stomach, hepatobiliary tract, ureter, renal pelvis, ovaries and brain. The phenotypic diversity may partially be explained by allelic heterogeneity. The aim of this study was to investigate the frequency of extracolonic cancers in a cohort of females sharing the same c.C1528T disease-predisposing mutation in the hMLH1 gene. Data on cancer history were obtained from 87 mutation-positive females and 121 mutation-negative sisters, as a control group. Testing for microsatellite instability (MSI) and expression of the wild-type hMLH1 allele was performed on extra-colonic tumour tissue blocks of mutation-positive individuals. Extracolonic cancer occurred in 14% (12/87) of mutation-positive females vs. 7% (8/121) of mutation-negative females (P = 0.10). Multiple primary cancers occurred at a significantly higher incidence in the first group. Breast cancer, which was the most frequent extra-colonic cancer in mutation positive females (53%), occurred at a young age, and occurred bilaterally in two out of seven cases. Involvement of the hMLH1 gene was confirmed in five out of seven cases of breast cancer, two cases of
endometrial cancer
, one case of ovarian cancer and one case of renal cell carcinoma, by detecting immunohistochemical compromise of the gene product. Although the study might not have been adequately statistically powered (to provide a significant P value), the noteworthy findings in this study include the confirmation of a range of Lynch II type cancers in a cohort we previously thought was wholly predisposed to Lynch I features, and a confirmation of breast cancer as part of the spectrum of
Lynch syndrome
cancers affecting women.
...
PMID:The extracolonic cancer spectrum in females with the common 'South African' hMLH1 c.C1528T mutation. 1804 11
Lynch syndrome
is the predisposition to visceral malignancies that are associated with deleterious germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes, including MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2. Muir-Torre syndrome is a variant of
Lynch syndrome
that includes a predisposition to certain skin tumors. We determined the frequency of Muir-Torre syndrome among 50
Lynch syndrome
families that were ascertained from a population-based series of cancer patients who were newly diagnosed with colorectal or
endometrial carcinoma
. Histories of Muir-Torre syndrome-associated skin tumors were documented during counseling of family members. Muir-Torre syndrome was observed in 14 (28%) of 50 families and in 14 (9.2%) of 152 individuals with
Lynch syndrome
. Four (44%) of nine families with MLH1 mutations had a member with Muir-Torre syndrome compared with 10 (42%) of 24 families with MSH2 mutations (P = .302). Families who carried the c.942+3A>T MSH2 gene mutation had a higher frequency of Muir-Torre syndrome than families who carried other mutations in the MSH2 gene (75% vs 25%; P = .026). Muir-Torre syndrome was not found in families with mutations in the MSH6 or PMS2 genes. Our results suggest that Muir-Torre syndrome is simply a variant of
Lynch syndrome
. Screening for Muir-Torre syndrome-associated skin lesions among patients with
Lynch syndrome
is recommended.
...
PMID:The frequency of Muir-Torre syndrome among Lynch syndrome families. 1827 Mar 43
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