abstract
The question of whether prostate cancer is part of the Lynch syndrome
spectrum of tumors is unresolved. We investigated the mismatch repair
(MMR) status and pathologic features of prostate cancers diagnosed in
MMR gene mutation carriers. Prostate cancers (mean age at
diagnosis = 62 ± SD = 8 years) from 32 MMR mutation carriers (23 MSH2, 5
MLH1 and 4 MSH6) enrolled in the Australasian, Mayo Clinic and Ontario
sites of the Colon Cancer Family Registry were examined for
clinico-pathologic features and MMR-deficiency (immunohistochemical loss
of MMR protein expression and high levels of microsatellite
instability; MSI-H).
Tumor MMR-deficiency was observed for 22 cases
[69 %; 95 % confidence interval (CI) 50-83 %], with the highest
prevalence of MMR-deficiency in tumors from MSH2 mutation carriers
(19/23, 83 %) compared with MLH1 and MSH6 carriers combined (3/9, 33 %;
p = 0.01). MMR-deficient tumors had increased levels of tumor
infiltrating lymphocytes compared with tumors without MMR-deficiency
(p = 0.04). Under the assumption that tumour MMR-deficiency occurred
only because the cancer was caused by the germline mutation, mutation
carriers are at 3.2-fold (95 % CI 2.0-6.3) increased risk of prostate
cancer, and when assessed by gene, the relative risk was greatest for
MSH2 carriers (5.8, 95 % CI 2.6-20.9). Prostate cancer was the first or
only diagnosed tumor in 37 % of carriers. MMR gene mutation carriers
have at least a twofold or greater increased risk of developing
MMR-deficient prostate cancer where the risk is highest for MSH2
mutation carriers. MMR IHC screening of prostate cancers will aid in
identifying MMR gene mutation carriers
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