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Hereditary GI Cancer-a Primer for Medical Oncologists Ophira Ginsburg, MD, MSc, FRCPC Clinical Lead, Cancer Prevention & Screening Director Familial Oncology Central East Regional Cancer Program March, 2009 Objectives 1. HNPCC review Diagnosis, genetic testing, cancer risks, risk reduction strategies 2. Other Hereditary GI syndromes: FAP, AFAP/MAP, HDGC 3. Criteria for referral to Familial Oncology Programs Hereditary GI Cancer Examples [gene] • HNPCC [MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2] FAP [APC] AFAP [APC, MUTYH1] • FHDG [CDH1] • • Why do genetic testing? To confirm there is a genetic predisposition to cancer To predict which family members are at increased risk of cancer To prevent cancer or detect it early GENETICS SERVICE Genetic Counselling Process Standard Timeframe 6-8 months REFERRAL •Triage •Family hx forms Seen <2wks if urgent Chart Prep •Forms received •Pedigree drawn •Pathology verification Case conference/ Counselling + Testing (if indicated /accepted) Result session •Follow-up appts arranged Courtesy of Lori Van Manen, 2008 What Happens During a Genetic Counselling Session? Risk Assessment Review of hereditary cancer Discussions regarding testing: Pros Obtain information about personal risk Provide incentives for surveillance Clarifies uncertainty Patient empowerment Assists ongoing research Cons Inconclusive results (often) Feelings of guilt or anxiety Family tensions Ethical issues Insurance issues Decreased compliance with screening History of Familial Oncology Programs 1995: counselling and genetic testing became available through research in 1995. 2001: Ministry of Health established recommended referral and testing criteria, and began funding BRCA1/2 testing. Since 2001: HNPCC counselling/testing funded BUT. Local estimates of uptake/referrals given 5-10% CRC caused by HNPCC, ~ 20-25% CRC incident cases *should* be referred. Est: 10% capture so far CRC Lynch Syndrome in Family “G” Dr. Aldred Scott Warthin, MD, PhD described “Family G” in a 1913 publication based on records ascertained from the University of Michigan hospitals between 1895 and 1913. Progenitor site unknown d. 60y A B C D E F G H I d. 47y Site Unknown d. 64y Stomach d. 84y d. 26y d. 63y d. 55y Colon, NOS d. 42y Rectum d. 60y Stomach d. 55y Uterus, NOS Douglas et al. (2005) History of Molecular Genetics of Lynch Syndrome in Family G; JAMA; Vol. 294 (17), 2195-2202 “Of the 48 descendants of the cancerous grandfather, 17 have died or been operated on for cancer. The preponderance of carcinoma of the uterus (ten cases) and of the stomach (seven cases) is very striking in the family history” Dr. Warthin, 1913. Why HNPCC is important HNPCC/Lynch syndrome- 3 to 5 times more common than FAP Harder to diagnose: many non CRC tumours, families with more “other tumours” than colorectal potential for 1 or 2 prevention of other HNCC cancers: endometrial, urothelial, ovarian? HNPCC -CRC Unique Features Colorectal cancer: • 70% right sided distribution • Synchronous, metachronous primaries • Pathology: mucinous, poorly differentiated, peritumoural lymphocytic infiltration • Prognosis: ? • Response to chemo? HNPCC Cancer General Population Risk Risks Mean Age of Onset Colon 5.5% 80% 44 years Endometrium 2.7% 20-60% 46 years Stomach < 1% 11-19% 56 years Ovary 1.6% 9-12% 42.5 years Hepatobiliary tract < 1% 2-7% Not reported Urinary tract < 1% 4-5% ~ 55 years Small bowel < 1% 1-4% 49 years Brain/central nervous system < 1% 1-3% ~ 50 years Cancer risk (%) by age 70 Type of Cancer MLH1 39 Female CRC MSH2 71 MSH6 Lower than MLH1/MSH2 96 Male Endometrium 42 61 Higher than MLH1/MSH2 Ovary 3.4 10.4 specific risk unknown Stomach 2.1 4.3 specific risk unknown Small bowel 7.2 4.5 specific risk unknown Urinary Tract 1.3 12 specific risk unknown Other specific risk unknown Extracolonic- 11 Extracolonic -48 Family History in HNPCCmore than meets the eye Lynch and de la Chapelle HNPCC-criteria for testingbeyond Amsterdam* Revised Amsterdam (ICG-HNPCC, 1999) o o o o o 3 relatives with CRC or assoc ca (uterine, small bowel, ureter, renal pelvis) 1st degree of the other 2 2 successive generations 1 before age 50 Histological verification 50% by mutation analysis Revised Bethesda (Umar et al, 2004) o o o o o CRC in pt under 50 Synch/metachronous, or other associated ca CRC with MSI under 60 CRC with one or more 1st degree relative (under 50) CRC with 2 or more 1st/ 2nd degree relative (any age) 15% by mutation analysis *R/O FAP 2 main classes of CRC: different models of tumourigenesis Chromosomal instability: 85% distal; aneuploid; APC, p53 K-Ras mutations; more aggressive; prototype FAP “APC= the gatekeeper of CRC” Microsatellite instability: 15% proximal: diploid; MSI, MMR mutations; less aggressive?, prototype HNPCC “MMR genes = caretakers of CRC” Genetic Testing in HNPCC MSI- microsatellite instability (tumour) IHC- immunohistochemistry (tumour) Germ-line DNA for mutations in one of 3 genes (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6) PMS2 Amsterdam or research lab Microsatellite instability hallmark of tumours in HNPCC Microsatellites: genomic regions with repetitive short DNA sequences (often single nucleotides) prone to mutation during DNA replication Results in elongation or contraction = instability Microsatellite Instability • When DNA polymerase inserts the wrong bases in newly synthesized DNA, the “mismatch repair” enzymes repair the mistake • Defects in mismatch repair genes (MLH1, MSH2, MLH6) lead to the mutator phenotype: high frequency microsatellite instability or “MSI-H” Gryfe et al, NEJM 2000 NEJM May 5,2005 Hampel et al HNPCC: Risk Reduction Options Colorectal Unaffected: colonoscopy to cecum q 1-2 years Affected w CRC: consider subtotal colectomy at 1st diagnosis d/t risk of 2nd primaries http://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/PDF/colorectal_screening.pdf Seminars in Oncology, Oct 2007 HNPCC: Risk Reduction Gynecological Cancers Screening for ovarian ca: CA125 + TVUS jury still out- Lancet Oncology online Mar 09 Screening for endometrial ca: annual TVUS + random endometrial bx (age 30+) few studies: review Lindor et al, JAMA 2006 See also current NCCN guidelines Surgical Options for Gyne Ca Prophylactic BSO Ovarian/FT risk reduction > 80-90% nb/ primary peritoneal carcinomatosis ~5-7%) Prophylactic TAH/BSO -less studied but likely >90% RR for endometrial ca in HNPCC mutation carriers Recent meta-analysis for HBOC (BRCA carriers) : J Natl Cancer Inst. 2009;101(2):80-87 HNPCC Colorectal Ca Prognosis many studies: stage-for-stage survival advantage in HNPCC-CRC landmark paper: Gryfe (NEJM 2000): • • • 607 consecutive cases CRC <age 50 17% had MSI-H Multivariate analysis showed a sigificant survival advantage for MSI-H patients versus MSS, independent of ALL other prognostic factors. The “atypical family history” Families w multiple cases of non-CRC HNPCCassociated cancers *GU-TCC renal pelvis, bladder, ovarian, squamous cell endometrial, no colorectal cancer in “line of fire” + mutation MSH2 Are the carriers at risk of colorectal ca? YES, and should be screened appropriately d. 33 appendix ruptured d. 84 5 12/20/1899 d. 49 1/16/1899 d. 49 ovarian ca; dx. 46 no info bladder ca COD unknown + PA 1925 d. 59 colon ca dx. 56 1927 80 TAH @ 41 transitional cell ca of Rt. ureter, dx. 60 Stage 1C ovarian ca, dx. 67 - tx with BSO + adjuvant chemo peritoneal recurrence - transitional cell ca dx 74 + 28 1945 60 endometrial ca; dx. 52 MSI + IHC testing 2002 - unstable at BAT26 DNA Sequencing 2004 - MSH2 mut. +ve 27 31 34 ca, type unknown + PA PA 12/17/1952 54 12/1/1931 66 pancreatic ca dx. 68 10 1961 44 squamous cell carcinoma dx. 38 Rt. shoulder (Growing like keratoacanthoma) 8 34 36 d. 82 d. 62 colon ca dx. 55 uterine ca? or kidney ca? + d. 60 colon ca dx. 59 d. 77 colon ca dx. 77 d. stroke d. 77 uterine ca dx. ? MSH2 +ve presumed MLH1 carri 4/5/1925 - ? d. 71 colorectal ca (3 sep primaries) dx. 55, 62, 69 1924 - ? d. 68 stroke ? n 1950 48 19 1956 42 MLH1 +ve 11/27/1960 38 d. 45 stroke bowel problems presumed MLH1 carrier 1924 - ? d. 68 stroke d. 64 PA PA 1921 - ? 77 endometrial ca dx. 53 colon ca dx. 77 80's colon ca dx. 70-Toronto PA 70-80 PA 3 1956 42 MLH1 +ve 11/27/1960 38 48 44 2 d. 48 colon ca dx. 45 MSI unstable at Bat26 locus IHC deficiency on MLH1 2 1987 19 11/10/1992 14 3/12/1997 10 16-25 d. 33 rectal ca dx. 26 46 France 44 colonoscopy 2 16-25 45 3 15-21 15-21 FAP- prototype for hereditary cancer 100s to 1000s of adenomatous polyps throughout colon & rectum 100% penetrance without surgery Very early age of onset (polyposis by 20’s most ca by 40s) APC gene chromosome 5 Risk-reducing surgery in FAP Sigmoidoscopy: q1-2 ~ age 10-12, genetic testing Colonoscopy: once polyps + annually if colectomy is delayed more than one year Prophylactic Colectomy: recommended- TPC, IRA, IPAA (ileal pouch) Follow-up screening is necessary JCO Oct 1, 2006 ASCO review: FAP- Desmoids 12-17% of FAP patients • Intra-abdominal 80%, small bowel mesentery >50% (present w SBO) • Genotype: APC mutation b/w codons 1310-2011 • Tend to occur AFTER surgery, high RR, high morbidity • Rx: sx for small, well defined desmoids; Tamoxifen, chemo: vinblastine, MTX (RR 4050%) or for rapidly progressive desmoids per sarcoma protocol (adriamycin, dacarbazine) FAP-other tumours Upper GI tumours • 80-90% FAP mutation carriers have duodenal or periampullary polyps, of which • 36% will develop advanced polyposis • 3-5% will develop invasive carcinoma • Surveillance: side-viewing endoscopy + bx suspicious polyps @ 25-30 yrs • Polypectomy for high-grade dysplasia, villous changes, ulceration, > 1 cm size chemoprevention? • • • NSAIDS: level 1 evidence sulindac, celecoxib, rofecoxib shown to reduce # polyps in FAP, but not proven to reduce cancer incidence or mortality ** long term use as an alternative to sx is NOT recommended + adverse effects Calcium HRT FAP: natural history—revised Due to improved diagnosis, and prevention/screening for CRC, periampullary cancer and desmoids have become the leading causes of death for FAP(APC) mutation carriers Other Polyposis Syndromes AFAP-attenuated familial polyposis 10-100 polyps, proximal location, later age of onset (1307K allele ~ 6% Ashkenazi Jews, 2x CRC risk) MUTYH1 mutations: “MAP” recessive inheritance -7.5 % of pts w classical phenotype but APC J. Jass. Pathology Res & Practice (2008) 204: 431-447 Attenuated FAP “MAP” MYH-associated polyposis coli Nielsen et al, Journal of Medical Genetics 2005 Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer E-cadherin CDH1 gene 70% risk of diffuse gastric ca 40% risk of lobular breast ca Prophylactic total gastrectomy ?screening chromoendoscopy Lynch et al, Cancer 2008 Jun 15;112(12):2655-63 Objectives HNPCC review Diagnosis, genetic testing, cancer risks, risk reduction strategies Other Hereditary GI syndromes: FAP, AFAP/MAP, HDGC Criteria for referral to Familial Oncology Programs