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Microsatellite instability in colorectal-cancer patients with suspected genetic predisposition

✍ Scribed by D. Calistri; S. Presciuttini; G. Buonsanti; P. Radice; I. Gazzoli; V. Pensotti; P. Sala; M. Eboli; S. Andreola; A. Russo; M. Pierotti; L. Bertario; G.N. Ranzani


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
French
Weight
67 KB
Volume
89
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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✦ Synopsis


Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is a dominantly inherited syndrome linked to DNA-mismatch-repair (MMR) gene defects, which also account for microsatellite instability (MSI) in tumour tissues. Diagnosis is based mainly on family history, according to widely accepted criteria (Amsterdam Criteria: AC). Aim of this work was to assess MSI in colorectal-cancer patients with suspected genetic predisposition, and to verify whether MSI represents a tool to manage MMR gene (hMSH2 and hMLH1) mutation analysis. We investigated 13 microsatellites (including the 5 NCI/ICG-HNPCC markers) in 45 patients with suspected hereditary predisposition (including 16 subjects from HNPCC families fulfilling the AC). We found MSI-H (high frequency of instability, i.e., in >30% of the markers) in 85% of the HNPCC patients and in 16% of the non-HNPCC subjects. The 5 NCI/ ICG-HNPCC microsatellites proved to be the most effective in detecting MSI, being mononucleotide repeats the most unstable markers. We investigated the association between hMSH2-and hMLH1 gene mutations and MSI. Our results indicate that AC are highly predictive both of tumour instability and of MMR-gene mutations. Therefore, as the most likely mutation carriers, HNPCC subjects might be directly analyzed for gene mutations, while to test for MSI in selected non-HNPCC patients and to further investigate MMR genes in MSI-H cases, appears to be a cost-effective way to identify subjects, other than those from kindred fulfilling AC, who might benefit from genetic testing.


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