Risks of Lynch Syndrome Cancers for MSH6 Mutation Carriers

Laura Baglietto(South Australia Pathology), Noralane M. Lindor(South Australia Pathology), James G. Dowty(South Australia Pathology), Darren M. White(South Australia Pathology), Anja Wagner(South Australia Pathology), E. Gómez(South Australia Pathology), A. H. J. T. Vriends(South Australia Pathology), Dutch Lynch Syndrome Study Group(South Australia Pathology), Nicola Cartwright(South Australia Pathology), Rebecca A. Barnetson(South Australia Pathology), Susan M. Farrington(South Australia Pathology), Albert Tenesa(South Australia Pathology), Heather Hampel(South Australia Pathology), Daniel D. Buchanan(South Australia Pathology), Sven Arnold(South Australia Pathology), Joanne Young(South Australia Pathology), Michael D. Walsh(South Australia Pathology), Jeremy R. Jass(South Australia Pathology), Finlay Macrae(South Australia Pathology), Yoland Antill(South Australia Pathology), Ingrid Winship(South Australia Pathology), Graham G. Giles(South Australia Pathology), Jack Goldblatt(South Australia Pathology), Susan Parry(South Australia Pathology), Graeme Suthers(South Australia Pathology), Barbara Leggett(South Australia Pathology), Malinda L. Butz(South Australia Pathology), Melyssa Aronson(South Australia Pathology), Jenny N. Poynter(South Australia Pathology), John A. Baron(South Australia Pathology), Loı̈c Le Marchand(South Australia Pathology), Robert W. Haile(South Australia Pathology), Steve Gallinger(South Australia Pathology), John L. Hopper(South Australia Pathology), John D. Potter(South Australia Pathology), Albert de la Chapelle(South Australia Pathology), Hans F. A. Vasen(South Australia Pathology), Malcolm G. Dunlop(South Australia Pathology), Stephen N. Thibodeau(South Australia Pathology), Mark A. Jenkins(Mayo Clinic)
JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute
December 22, 2009
Cited by 375Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Germline mutations in MSH6 account for 10%-20% of Lynch syndrome colorectal cancers caused by hereditary DNA mismatch repair gene mutations. Because there have been only a few studies of mutation carriers, their cancer risks are uncertain. METHODS: We identified 113 families of MSH6 mutation carriers from five countries that we ascertained through family cancer clinics and population-based cancer registries. Mutation status, sex, age, and histories of cancer, polypectomy, and hysterectomy were sought from 3104 of their relatives. Age-specific cumulative risks for carriers and hazard ratios (HRs) for cancer risks of carriers, compared with those of the general population of the same country, were estimated by use of a modified segregation analysis with appropriate conditioning depending on ascertainment. RESULTS: For MSH6 mutation carriers, the estimated cumulative risks to ages 70 and 80 years, respectively, were as follows: for colorectal cancer, 22% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 14% to 32%) and 44% (95% CI = 28% to 62%) for men and 10% (95% CI = 5% to 17%) and 20% (95% CI = 11% to 35%) for women; for endometrial cancer, 26% (95% CI = 18% to 36%) and 44% (95% CI = 30% to 58%); and for any cancer associated with Lynch syndrome, 24% (95% CI = 16% to 37%) and 47% (95% CI = 32% to 66%) for men and 40% (95% CI = 32% to 52%) and 65% (95% CI = 53% to 78%) for women. Compared with incidence for the general population, MSH6 mutation carriers had an eightfold increased incidence of colorectal cancer (HR = 7.6, 95% CI = 5.4 to 10.8), which was independent of sex and age. Women who were MSH6 mutation carriers had a 26-fold increased incidence of endometrial cancer (HR = 25.5, 95% CI = 16.8 to 38.7) and a sixfold increased incidence of other cancers associated with Lynch syndrome (HR = 6.0, 95% CI = 3.4 to 10.7). CONCLUSION: We have obtained precise and accurate estimates of both absolute and relative cancer risks for MSH6 mutation carriers.


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