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Colon
Cancer risk in U.S. traced to common
ancestor
Newswise — A married
couple who sailed from England to America
around 1630 may be the ancestors of hundreds
of people alive today who are at risk for a
hereditary form of colon cancer.
Researchers from Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI)
at The University of Utah have discovered a
founder mutation—a mutation that has been
traced from many individuals in the
present-day population back to a common
ancestor—which may contribute to a
significant percentage of colon cancer cases
in the United States. An article reporting the finding was
published today in Clinical Gastroenterology
and Hepatology.
The researchers studied
two large families, one in Utah and one in
New York, that both carry a specific genetic
mutation responsible for increased risk of
colorectal cancer. They discovered that the
two families share common ancestors—a couple
who came to America from England in the
1630s, about the time of the Pilgrims.
“The fact that this mutation can be traced
so far back in time suggests that it could
be carried by many more families in the
United States than is currently known,” says
Deborah Neklason, Ph.D., a University of
Utah research assistant professor and leader
of the study. “In fact, this founder
mutation might be related to many colon
cancer cases in the United States.”
The mutation causes a
condition called attenuated familial
adenomatous polyposis (AFAP). Without proper
clinical care, people with the AFAP mutation
have a greater than 2 in 3 risk of colon
cancer by age 80, compared to about 1 in 24
for the general population. Yet the cancer
can be prevented with proper screening and
care.
“Knowing one has the condition can be
life-saving,” Neklason says. “Not only are
affected individuals at greater risk then
the general population as they grow older,
but precancerous polyps are often found in
mutation carriers in their late teens and
colon cancer has been diagnosed in
individuals in their 20s.”
However, she explains,
clinical recognition of AFAP can be
difficult because colon cancer develops on
average in a person’s 50s and the majority
of sporadic, or non-hereditary, colon
cancers occur after the age of 50. About a
third of people with AFAP also have just a
few polyps—again similar to that for
sporadic colon cancer—and they may have a
limited family history.
“People need to talk
with their family, learn their family cancer
history, and share this information with
their doctors. Doctors need to be aware of
AFAP, recognize people at risk, and know the
screening and treatment protocols that can
prevent colon cancer from developing,”
Neklason says.
The Utah family in this
study has more than 7,000 descendants
spanning nine generations recorded in the
Utah Population Database (UPDB), a shared
resource for genetics research housed at HCI.
Researchers use UPDB to identify and study
families that have higher than normal
incidence of cancer or other disease, to
analyze patterns of genetic inheritance, and
to identify specific genetic mutations.
Known individuals in
this one family account for 0.15 percent of
all colorectal cancers reported in Utah from
1966 to 1995. Based on that percentage,
researchers expected to see eight cases of
colon cancer from this family among the over
5,000 reported between 1996 and 2003. But
after previous research identified this
family as affected by AFAP, aggressive
education and clinical intervention resulted
in only one mutation carrier in the family
being diagnosed with colon cancer during
those years.
“Preventing seven
cancers may not sound like much,” says
Neklason. “But that’s seven colon cancers
that didn’t devastate this family. And
consider that $50,000 is a conservative
estimate for the cost of colorectal cancer
treatment. That amounts to at least
$350,000, and that means a lot for any
family.”
Co-authors on the study
included physicians and researchers that
belong to several University of Utah
departments, including Huntsman Cancer
Institute, Oncological Sciences, Human
Genetics, and Medicine. Funding for the
study was provided by the National Cancer
Institute, the Utah Department of Health,
the University of Utah, and Huntsman Cancer
Institute.
The mission of Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI)
at The University of Utah is to understand
cancer from its beginnings, to use that
knowledge in the creation and improvement of
cancer treatments, to relieve the suffering
of cancer patients, and to provide education
about cancer risk, prevention, and care. HCI
is a National Cancer Institute-designated
cancer center, which means that it meets the
highest national standards for cancer care
and research and receives support for its
scientific endeavors. HCI is also a member
of the National Comprehensive Cancer
Network (NCCN), a
not-for-profit alliance of the world’s
leading cancer centers, which is dedicated
to improving the quality and effectiveness
of care provided to patients with cancer.