A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer

The frequency, origin, and phenotypic expression of a germline MSH2 gene mutation previously identified in seven kindreds with hereditary non-polyposis cancer syndrome (HNPCC) was investigated. The mutation (A→T at nt943+3) disrupts the 3' splice site of exon 5 leading to the deletion of this e...

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Main Authors: Froggatt, Nicola J., Green, Jane, Brassett, Cecilia, Evans, D. Gareth R, Bishop, D. Timothy, Kolodner, Richard, Maher, Eamonn R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/8de7cb5c-5e75-43b2-8eda-f09d4abcab93
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spelling ftumanchesterpub:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/8de7cb5c-5e75-43b2-8eda-f09d4abcab93 2023-11-12T04:21:17+01:00 A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer Froggatt, Nicola J. Green, Jane Brassett, Cecilia Evans, D. Gareth R Bishop, D. Timothy Kolodner, Richard Maher, Eamonn R. 1999 https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/8de7cb5c-5e75-43b2-8eda-f09d4abcab93 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Froggatt , N J , Green , J , Brassett , C , Evans , D G R , Bishop , D T , Kolodner , R & Maher , E R 1999 , ' A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer ' , Journal of Medical Genetics , vol. 36 , no. 2 , pp. 97-102 . Colorectal cancer HNPCC MSH2 mutation article 1999 ftumanchesterpub 2023-10-30T09:10:31Z The frequency, origin, and phenotypic expression of a germline MSH2 gene mutation previously identified in seven kindreds with hereditary non-polyposis cancer syndrome (HNPCC) was investigated. The mutation (A→T at nt943+3) disrupts the 3' splice site of exon 5 leading to the deletion of this exon from MSH2 mRNA and represents the only frequent MSH2 mutation so far reported. Although this mutation was initially detected in four of 33 colorectal cancer families analysed from eastern England, more extensive analysis has reduced the frequency to four of 52 (8%) English HNPCC kindreds analysed. In contrast, the MSH2 mutation was identified in 10 of 20 (50%) separately identified colorectal families from Newfoundland. To investigate the origin of this mutation in colorectal cancer families from England (n = 4), Newfoundland (n = 10), and the United States (n = 3), haplotype analysis using microsatellite markers linked to MSH2 was performed. Within the English and US families there was little evidence for a recent common origin of the MSH2 splice site mutation in most families. In contrast, a common haplotype was identified at the two flanking markers (CA5 and D2S288) in eight of the Newfoundland families. These findings suggested a founder effect within Newfoundland similar to that reported by others for two MLH1 mutations in Finnish HNPCC families. We calculated age related risks of all, colorectal, endometrial, and ovarian cancers in nt943+3 A→T MSH2 mutation carriers (n = 76) for all patients and for men and women separately. For both sexes combined, the penetrances at age 60 years for all cancers and for colorectal cancer were 0.86 and 0.57, respectively. The risk of colorectal cancer was significantly higher (p <0.01) in males than females (0.63 v 0.30 and 0.84 v 0.44 at ages 50 and 60 years, respectively). For females there was a high risk of endometrial cancer (0.5 at age 60 years) and premenopausal ovarian cancer (0.2 at 50 years). These intersex differences in colorectal cancer risks have implications for ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland The University of Manchester: Research Explorer
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Manchester: Research Explorer
op_collection_id ftumanchesterpub
language English
topic Colorectal cancer
HNPCC
MSH2 mutation
spellingShingle Colorectal cancer
HNPCC
MSH2 mutation
Froggatt, Nicola J.
Green, Jane
Brassett, Cecilia
Evans, D. Gareth R
Bishop, D. Timothy
Kolodner, Richard
Maher, Eamonn R.
A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
topic_facet Colorectal cancer
HNPCC
MSH2 mutation
description The frequency, origin, and phenotypic expression of a germline MSH2 gene mutation previously identified in seven kindreds with hereditary non-polyposis cancer syndrome (HNPCC) was investigated. The mutation (A→T at nt943+3) disrupts the 3' splice site of exon 5 leading to the deletion of this exon from MSH2 mRNA and represents the only frequent MSH2 mutation so far reported. Although this mutation was initially detected in four of 33 colorectal cancer families analysed from eastern England, more extensive analysis has reduced the frequency to four of 52 (8%) English HNPCC kindreds analysed. In contrast, the MSH2 mutation was identified in 10 of 20 (50%) separately identified colorectal families from Newfoundland. To investigate the origin of this mutation in colorectal cancer families from England (n = 4), Newfoundland (n = 10), and the United States (n = 3), haplotype analysis using microsatellite markers linked to MSH2 was performed. Within the English and US families there was little evidence for a recent common origin of the MSH2 splice site mutation in most families. In contrast, a common haplotype was identified at the two flanking markers (CA5 and D2S288) in eight of the Newfoundland families. These findings suggested a founder effect within Newfoundland similar to that reported by others for two MLH1 mutations in Finnish HNPCC families. We calculated age related risks of all, colorectal, endometrial, and ovarian cancers in nt943+3 A→T MSH2 mutation carriers (n = 76) for all patients and for men and women separately. For both sexes combined, the penetrances at age 60 years for all cancers and for colorectal cancer were 0.86 and 0.57, respectively. The risk of colorectal cancer was significantly higher (p <0.01) in males than females (0.63 v 0.30 and 0.84 v 0.44 at ages 50 and 60 years, respectively). For females there was a high risk of endometrial cancer (0.5 at age 60 years) and premenopausal ovarian cancer (0.2 at 50 years). These intersex differences in colorectal cancer risks have implications for ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Froggatt, Nicola J.
Green, Jane
Brassett, Cecilia
Evans, D. Gareth R
Bishop, D. Timothy
Kolodner, Richard
Maher, Eamonn R.
author_facet Froggatt, Nicola J.
Green, Jane
Brassett, Cecilia
Evans, D. Gareth R
Bishop, D. Timothy
Kolodner, Richard
Maher, Eamonn R.
author_sort Froggatt, Nicola J.
title A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
title_short A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
title_full A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
title_fullStr A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
title_full_unstemmed A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
title_sort common msh2 mutation in english and north american hnpcc families: origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer
publishDate 1999
url https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/8de7cb5c-5e75-43b2-8eda-f09d4abcab93
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Froggatt , N J , Green , J , Brassett , C , Evans , D G R , Bishop , D T , Kolodner , R & Maher , E R 1999 , ' A common MSH2 mutation in English and North American HNPCC families: Origin, phenotypic expression, and sex specific differences in colorectal cancer ' , Journal of Medical Genetics , vol. 36 , no. 2 , pp. 97-102 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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