0000000000266749
AUTHOR
Noora Porkka
Does breast carcinoma belong to the Lynch syndrome tumor spectrum? : Somatic mutational profiles vs. ovarian and colorectal carcinomas
// Noora K. Porkka 1 , Alisa Olkinuora 1 , Teijo Kuopio 2 , 3 , Maarit Ahtiainen 4 , Samuli Eldfors 5 , Henrikki Almusa 5 , Jukka-Pekka Mecklin 6 , 7 , 8 and Paivi Peltomaki 1 1 Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland 2 Department of Pathology, Jyvaskyla Central Hospital, Jyvaskyla, Finland 3 Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Jyvaskyla, Jyvaskyla, Finland 4 Department of Education and Research, Jyvaskyla Central Hospital and University of Eastern Finland, Jyvaskyla, Finland 5 Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland 6 Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences, University of J…
Converging endometrial and ovarian tumorigenesis in Lynch syndrome: Shared origin of synchronous carcinomas.
AbstractObjective The diagnosis of carcinoma in both the uterus and the ovary simultaneously is not uncommon and raises the question of synchronous primaries vs. metastatic disease. Targeted sequencing of sporadic synchronous endometrial and ovarian carcinomas has shown that such tumors are clonally related and thus represent metastatic disease from one site to the other. Our purpose was to investigate whether or not the same applies to Lynch syndrome (LS), in which synchronous cancers of the gynecological tract are twice as frequent as in sporadic cases, reflecting inherited defects in DNA mismatch repair (MMR). Methods MMR gene mutation carriers with endometrial or ovarian carcinoma or en…
Epidemiological, clinical and molecular characterization of Lynch‐like syndrome: A population‐based study
Colorectal carcinomas that are mismatch repair (MMR)‐deficient in the absence of MLH1 promoter methylation or germline mutations represent Lynch‐like syndrome (LLS). Double somatic events inactivating MMR genes are involved in the etiology of LLS tumors. Our purpose was to define the clinical and broader molecular hallmarks of LLS tumors and the population incidence of LLS, which remain poorly characterized. We investigated 762 consecutive colorectal carcinomas operated in Central Finland in 2000–2010. LLS cases were identified by a stepwise protocol based on MMR protein expression, MLH1 methylation and MMR gene mutation status. LLS tumors were profiled for CpG Island Methylator Phenotype (…