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A review on age‐related cancer risks in <scp>PTEN</scp> hamartoma tumor syndrome

Linda A.J. Hendricks, Nicoline Hoogerbrugge, Janneke Schuurs-Hoeijmakers, Janet R. Vos

2020Clinical Genetics76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Patients with PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS, comprising Cowden, Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba, and Proteus-like syndromes) are at increased risk of developing cancer due to pathogenic PTEN germline variants. This review summarizes age-, sex-, and type-specific malignant cancer risks for PHTS patients, which is urgently needed for clinical management. A PubMed literature search for Standardized Incidence Ratios or Cumulative Lifetime cancer risks (CLTRs) resulted in nine cohort studies comprising four independent PHTS cohorts, including mainly index cases and prevalent cancer cases. The median age at diagnosis was 36 years. Reported CLTRs for any cancer varied from 81% to 90%. The tumor spectrum included female breast cancer (CLTRs including sex-specific estimates at age 60-70: 67% to 85%), endometrium cancer (19% to 28%), thyroid cancer (6% to 38%), renal cancer (2% to 24%), colorectal cancer (9% to 32%), and melanoma (0% to 6%). Although these estimates provide guidance for clinical care, discrepancies between studies, sample sizes, retrospective designs, strongly ascertained cases, and lack of pediatric research emphasizes that data should be interpreted with great caution. Therefore, more accurate and more personalized age-, sex-, and cancer-specific risk estimates are needed to enable counseling of all PHTS patients irrespective of ascertainment, and improvement of cancer surveillance guidelines.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePTENCowden syndromeCancerThyroid cancerEndometrial cancerColorectal cancerOncologyBreast cancerInternal medicineLynch syndromeGeneticsBiologyPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayDNA mismatch repairApoptosisPI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling in cancerTuberous Sclerosis Complex ResearchRenal and related cancers
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