Literature DB >> 23794306

Clinical and molecular characterization of colorectal cancer in young Moroccan patients.

Amal Benmoussa1, Wafaa Badre, Monica Pedroni, Soumia Zamiati, Latifa Badre, Carmela Digregorio, Maurizio Ponz De Leon, Selama Nadifi.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND/AIMS: Early-onset colorectal cancers are relatively rare. About 20% of colorectal cancers are familial or hereditary. Two autosomal dominantly inherited cancer syndromes are more studied: Lynch syndrome accounts for 2-5% of colorectal cancers and familial adenomatous polyposis represents 1% of total colorectal cancers. Unlike the familial adenomatous polyposis syndrome, there are no clinical features that help in easily recognizing Lynch syndrome. The young age of cancer occurrence could be a criterion that should raise a suspicion of Lynch syndrome. In Morocco, the average age at diagnosis of colorectal cancers according to the register of cancers of Casablanca is 56 years, which is 10 years earlier than in European countries. Our study aimed to assess the frequency and molecular characteristics of the Lynch syndrome in Moroccan early-onset colorectal cancers patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The population analyzed included 70 patients. The criteria for inclusion of patients in this study were a colorectal cancers before age 50 and the exclusion of familial adenomatous polyposis. We started by searching for microsatellite instability, first by immunohistochemistry of 3 mismatch repair proteins (MLH1, MSH2 and MSH6) and with second confirmation using 4 monomorphic markers (BAT25, BAT26, NR21, and CAT25).
RESULTS: We found instability in 10/70 (15%) of the cases. The loss of expression affects more often the MLH1 protein, with 8 cases, versus 2 cases of altered MSH2. None of the 70 patients of the series fulfilled the Amsterdam II criteria, indicative of Lynch syndrome.
CONCLUSIONS: Further work needs to be done to discriminate hereditary cases from sporadic ones, but testing for microsatellite instability as a first step is important.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23794306     DOI: 10.4318/tjg.2012.0474

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Turk J Gastroenterol        ISSN: 1300-4948            Impact factor:   1.852


  1 in total

1.  Better long-term survival in young patients with non-metastatic colorectal cancer after surgery, an analysis of 69,835 patients in SEER database.

Authors:  Qingguo Li; Guoxiang Cai; Dawei Li; Yuwei Wang; Changhua Zhuo; Sanjun Cai
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-03       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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