abstract
Inheritance of a germline mutation in one of the DNA mismatch repair
(MMR) genes or the EPCAM gene is associated with an increased risk of
colorectal cancer, endometrial cancer, and other adult malignancies
(Lynch syndrome). The risk of childhood cancers in Lynch syndrome
families, however, is not well studied. Using data from the Colon Cancer
Family Registry, we compared the proportion of childhood cancers
(diagnosed before 18 years of age) in the first-, second-, and
third-degree relatives of 781 probands with a pathogenic mutation in one
of the MMR genes; MLH1 (n = 275), MSH2
(n = 342), MSH6 (n = 99), or PMS2 (n = 55) or in EPCAM (n = 10) (Lynch
syndrome families), with that of 5073 probands with MMR-deficient
colorectal cancer (non-Lynch syndrome families). There was no evidence
of a difference in the proportion of relatives with a childhood cancer
between Lynch syndrome families (41/17,230; 0.24 %) and non-Lynch
syndrome families (179/94,302; 0.19 %; p = 0.19). Incidence rate of all
childhood cancers was estimated to be 147 (95 % CI 107-206) per million
population per year in Lynch syndrome families and 115 (95 % CI
99.1-134) per million population per year in non-Lynch syndrome
families. There was no evidence for a significant increase in the risk
of all childhood cancers, hematologic cancers, brain and central nervous
system cancers, Lynch syndrome-associated cancers, or other cancers in
Lynch syndrome families compared with non-Lynch syndrome families.
Larger studies, however, are required to more accurately define the risk
of specific individual childhood cancers in Lynch syndrome families
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