The Identification of Lynch syndrome in British Columbia
CM Cremin, L Armstrong, S Gill, D Huntsman, C Bajdik
OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence of Lynch syndrome mutations
in a Canadian hereditary cancer clinic population, and to determine
the effectiveness of the program's referral criteria and testing
algorithm.
METHODS: A retrospective chart review of all patients who were
referred for and received genetic counselling at the BC Cancer
Agency's Hereditary Cancer Program for a family history of colon
cancer from August 1, 2004, to September 1, 2006, was performed.
Charts were reviewed for referral criteria met, cancer history, whether
testing was offered and the outcome of testing.
RESULTS: Lynch syndrome was confirmed or highly suspected in
14.3% of index test patients (eight of 56) by the identification of a
deleterious mutation or variant likely to be deleterious in either of
the hMLH1 or hMSH2 mismatch repair genes. In the program, the
two most effective criteria were a personal diagnosis of two or more
primary Lynch syndrome-related cancers (one diagnosed at younger
than 50 years of age) or two first-degree relatives with a Lynch
syndrome-related cancer (both diagnosed at younger than 50 years of
age). The respective positive predictive values of these two criteria
were calculated to be 66.7% (95% CI 40% to 93%) and 58.3% (95%
CI 30.4% to 86.2%).
CONCLUSIONS: The Hereditary Cancer Program developed and
successfully implemented an approach that selected individuals at risk
for Lynch syndrome with a significant pretest probability of mutation
of 14.3%. Improved ascertainment of families with Lynch syndrome
will require greater physician awareness of referral criteria, program
advances in the testing algorithm and a population-based approach to
screening incident colon cancers.
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