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FAP
  Additional Types of Cancer in People With FAP
fap cancer risk

By Miriam Komaromy, MD

Reviewed by Peggy Conrad, MS, CGC and Jonathan Terdiman, MD
Last updated August 15, 2000

 

It's a sobering fact that a diagnosis of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) — a hereditary syndrome triggered by mutations in a specific gene — virtually guarantees an eventual diagnosis of colon cancer, unless the colon is removed. People with FAP are also more likely to develop several additional types of cancer than are members of the population at large:

 
 
 

Cancer of the Small Bowel

Up to five percent of FAP patients will eventually develop small bowel cancer.
fap cancer risk
Although extremely rare in the general population, cancer of the small bowel (or small intestine), the part of the digestive tract located above the colon, is more than 300 times as likely to occur in people with FAP. Most people with FAP syndrome will eventually develop polyps, or adenomas, in the small bowel. However, less than one percent of people with FAP actually die from small bowel cancer.

Doctors recommend that people with FAP be screened for small bowel cancer every four years. Endoscopy, the procedure used for this, enables the doctor to make a visual search for polyps using a miniature camera attached to a thin, flexible tube that is guided through the patient's mouth and down through the stomach and part of the small bowel.

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Gastric Cancer

People with FAP are also more likely to develop gastric (stomach) polyps, although these do not appear to increase their risk of developing gastric cancer. (The polyps that develop in the stomach are a different type than those that develop in the colon and small intestine, and are less likely to become cancerous.) The exception to this occurs with FAP patients of Japanese and Korean descent, whose risk for stomach polyps becoming cancerous has been reported to be three to four times greater than that of other FAP patients.

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Thyroid Cancer

Although women with FAP are at increased risk for thyroid cancer, this disease is rare, both in the general population and in the FAP group. Only one percent to two percent of women with FAP develop thyroid cancer, and the disease is rarely fatal. Therefore, experts do not recommend that people with FAP undergo regular screening for thyroid cancer.

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Other Cancers

In addition, people with FAP are more likely than members of the general population to develop:
  • Brain cancer
  • An extremely rare form of childhood liver cancer

In addition, scientists recently discovered that the combination of colon cancer and brain cancer in a single family — commonly referred to as Turcot's syndrome — is actually a hallmark of both FAP and hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC), another hereditary syndrome associated with colon cancer.

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References

Galle, T. et al. (1999). Causes of death in familial adenomatous polyposis. Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology 34(8): 808-812.

Johan, G. et al. (1992). The risk of upper gastrointestinal cancer in familial adenomatous polyposis. Gastroenterology 102: 1980-1982

Cetta, F. et al. (1997). Thyroid carcinoma associated with familial adenomatous polyposis. Histopathology 31(3): 231-6.

 

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