Publication | Open Access
Early onset of colorectal cancer in a 13-year-old girl with Lynch syndrome
11
Citations
11
References
2016
Year
Cancer PathologyGeneticsGastroenterologyPathologyMmr GeneOncologyGastrointestinal OncologyEarly OnsetSurgical PathologyMolecular PathologyMolecular DiagnosticsRadiation OncologyLynch SyndromeCancer ResearchColorectal CancerCancer GeneticsGenetic DisorderGastrointestinal PathologyMedicine
Lynch syndrome is the most common inherited colon cancer syndrome. Patients with Lynch syndrome develop a range of cancers including colorectal cancer (CRC) and carry a mutation on one of the mismatched repair (MMR) genes. Although CRC usually occurs after the fourth decade in patients with Lynch syndrome harboring a heterozygous MMR gene mutation, it can occur in children with Lynch syndrome who have a compound heterozygous or homozygous MMR gene mutation. We report a case of CRC in a 13-year-old patient with Lynch syndrome and congenital heart disease. This patient had a heterozygous mutation in MLH1 (an MMR gene), but no compound MMR gene defects, and a K-RAS somatic mutation in the cancer cells.
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