Cancer risks by gene, age, and gender in 6350 carriers of pathogenic mismatch repair variants: findings from the Prospective Lynch Syndrome Database

Mev Dominguez–Valentin(Oslo University Hospital), Julian R. Sampson(Cardiff University), Toni T. Seppälä(University of Helsinki), Sanne W. ten Broeke(Leiden University Medical Center), John‐Paul Plazzer(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Sigve Nakken(Oslo University Hospital), Christoph Engel(Leipzig University), Stefan Aretz(University of Bonn), Mark A. Jenkins(The University of Melbourne), Lone Sunde(Aarhus University), Inge Bernstein(Aalborg University Hospital), Gabriel Capellá(Institut d'Investigació Biomédica de Bellvitge), Francesc Balaguer(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Huw Thomas(St Mark's Hospital), D. Gareth Evans(University of Manchester), John Burn(Newcastle University), Marc S. Greenblatt(University of Vermont), Eivind Hovig(Oslo University Hospital), Wouter H. de Vos tot Nederveen Cappel(Isala), Rolf H. Sijmons(University Medical Center Groningen), Lucio Bertario(Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori), Maria Grazia Tibiletti(University of Insubria), Giulia Martina Cavestro(Vita-Salute San Raffaele University), Annika Lindblom(Karolinska University Hospital), Adriana Della Valle(Hospital Central de las Fuerzas Armadas), Francisco López‐Köstner(Clínica Las Condes), Nathan Gluck(Tel Aviv University), Lior H. Katz(Sheba Medical Center), Karl Heinimann(University Hospital of Basel), Carlos Vaccaro(Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas), Reinhard Büttner(University of Cologne), Heike Görgens(Technische Universität Dresden), Elke Holinski‐Feder(LMU Klinikum), Monika Morak(LMU Klinikum), Stefanie Holzapfel(University of Bonn), Robert Hüneburg(University Hospital Bonn), Magnus von Knebel Doeberitz(German Cancer Research Center), Markus Loeffler(Leipzig University), Nils Rahner(Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf), Hans K. Schackert(Technische Universität Dresden), Verena Steinke‐Lange(LMU Klinikum), Wolff Schmiegel(Universitätsklinikum Knappschaftskrankenhaus Bochum), Deepak Vangala(Universitätsklinikum Knappschaftskrankenhaus Bochum), Kirsi Pylvänäinen(Central Finland Health Care District), Laura Renkonen‐Sinisalo(University of Helsinki), John L. Hopper(The University of Melbourne), Aung Ko Win(The University of Melbourne), Robert W. Haile(Stanford University), Noralane M. Lindor(Mayo Clinic Hospital), Steven Gallinger(Mount Sinai Hospital), Loı̈c Le Marchand(University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa), Polly A. Newcomb(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Jane C. Figueiredo(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Stephen N. Thibodeau(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Karin Wadt(Rigshospitalet), Christina Therkildsen(Copenhagen University Hospital), Henrik Okkels(Aalborg University Hospital), Zohreh Ketabi(Copenhagen University Hospital), Leticia Moreira(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Ariadna Sánchez(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Miquel Serra‐Burriel(Centre de Recerca en Economia Internacional), Marta Pineda(Institut d'Investigació Biomédica de Bellvitge), Matilde Navarro(Institut d'Investigació Biomédica de Bellvitge), Ignacio Blanco(Institut d'Investigació Biomédica de Bellvitge), Kate Green(University of Manchester), Fiona Lalloo(University of Manchester), Emma J. Crosbie(University of Manchester), James Hill(University of Manchester), Oliver G. Denton(Cardiff University), Ian M. Frayling(Cardiff University), Einar Andreas Rødland(Oslo University Hospital), Hans F. A. Vasen(Leiden University), Miriam Mints(Karolinska University Hospital), Florencia Neffa(Hospital Central de las Fuerzas Armadas), Patricia Esperón(Hospital Central de las Fuerzas Armadas), Karin Álvarez(Clínica Las Condes), Revital Kariv(Tel Aviv University), Guy Rosner(Tel Aviv University), Tamara Alejandra Piñero(Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas), María Laura González(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Pablo Kalfayan(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Douglas Tjandra(The University of Melbourne), Ingrid Winship(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Finlay Macrae(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Gabriela Möslein(Helios Universitätsklinikum Wuppertal), Jukka‐Pekka Mecklin(Central Finland Health Care District), Maartje Nielsen(Leiden University Medical Center), Pål Møller(Oslo University Hospital)
Genetics in Medicine
July 23, 2019
Cited by 640Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: Pathogenic variants affecting MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 cause Lynch syndrome and result in different but imprecisely known cancer risks. This study aimed to provide age and organ-specific cancer risks according to gene and gender and to determine survival after cancer. METHODS: We conducted an international, multicenter prospective observational study using independent test and validation cohorts of carriers of class 4 or class 5 variants. After validation the cohorts were merged providing 6350 participants and 51,646 follow-up years. RESULTS: There were 1808 prospectively observed cancers. Pathogenic MLH1 and MSH2 variants caused high penetrance dominant cancer syndromes sharing similar colorectal, endometrial, and ovarian cancer risks, but older MSH2 carriers had higher risk of cancers of the upper urinary tract, upper gastrointestinal tract, brain, and particularly prostate. Pathogenic MSH6 variants caused a sex-limited trait with high endometrial cancer risk but only modestly increased colorectal cancer risk in both genders. We did not demonstrate a significantly increased cancer risk in carriers of pathogenic PMS2 variants. Ten-year crude survival was over 80% following colon, endometrial, or ovarian cancer. CONCLUSION: Management guidelines for Lynch syndrome may require revision in light of these different gene and gender-specific risks and the good prognosis for the most commonly associated cancers.


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