abstract (case report)
Anticipation is a term used to express an earlier age of disease onset
in successive generations. Patients with Lynch syndrome (LS) harbor
mutations in MMR genes that appear to be associated with the phenomenon
where disease is diagnosed 5–12 years earlier in mutation carrying
children compared with their affected parent. This has the potential to
complicate the recognition of LS as defined by the Amsterdam criteria
(or iterations of it) in young probands affected by colorectal cancer.
In this report, we describe a case of an LS family with an MLH1
mutation (c.1748 del T). The phenomenon of anticipation was observed in
the son of a monozygotic twin who developed two colon cancers that were
diagnosed at an age 20 years earlier than the first diagnosis of cancer
in his mother. Both the mother and her twin went on to simultaneously
develop a rectal carcinoma.
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