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FAP
  Colon Cancer in People With FAP
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By Miriam Komaromy, MD

Reviewed by Peggy Conrad, MS, CGC and Jonathan Terdiman, MD
Last updated August 10, 2000

 

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) — a hereditary syndrome triggered by defects in a specific gene — accounts for approximately one percent of all colon cancer cases diagnosed. Although approximately two-thirds of FAP cases occur in patients with a family history of FAP, the rest of cases occur as a new mutation in patients with no family history of the syndrome.

 

 
 
 

Symptoms: Polyp Proliferation

Polyps often cause no physical symptoms.
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People with FAP almost always develop hundreds or even thousands of colorectal polyps at a very early age. Although these polyps are physical signs that colon cancer will develop, polyps cause no physical symptoms and a person with polyps is likely to be unaware of their presence, except in rare cases where they cause visible bleeding or symptoms of intestinal blockage.

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Because people with FAP develop so many polyps at such a young age, it is almost inevitable that some of these polyps will develop into colon cancer. For this reason, people with FAP generally develop colon cancer at a much younger age than members of the population at large. Polyps usually begin to appear around puberty, but can occur in children as young as age four. More than 95 percent of people with FAP will have polyps by the age of 30. The average age of onset of colon cancer for people with FAP is 39, compared to 65 for the rest of the population.

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Screening

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Doctors recommend that people with FAP be regularly screened for polyps beginning at age 10.
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If you have FAP, you are at extreme risk of developing colon cancer, and doctors recommend that you be regularly screened for polyps beginning at age 10. Sigmoidoscopy is recommended every year until polyps actually develop. This is a procedure in which a thin, flexible tube with a light and viewing camera at one end is placed in the anus and guided along the lower third of your colon.

If polyps do develop, your doctor may recommend that you have an annual colonoscopy (a more thorough procedure that allows a doctor to examine the entire length of the colon). Once polyps are detected, your doctor will help you decide when to remove them and which type of surgery is most appropriate.

Coming from a family that is at risk for FAP does not mean that you will necessarily have to undergo these rigorous screening procedures. If the mutation in your family can be identified, and if you do not carry the mutation, your recommended screening procedures for colon cancer would be similar to those recommended for the general population.

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Prevention

Soon after a member of a FAP family develops polyps in the colon or rectum, experts recommend that the patient's colon be surgically removed, because he or she is at such high risk of developing cancer. There are several surgical options for this, some of which involve removal of the rectum as well as the colon, since people with FAP can still develop cancer in the rectum even after the colon has been removed.

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References

Petersen, G., et al. (1999). Genetic testing and counseling for hereditary forms of colorectal cancer. Cancer 86: 1720-30

Galle, T. et al. (1999). Causes of death in familial adenomatous polyposis. Scand J Gastroeneterol 34(8): 808-12.

Kuwada, S. and Burt, R. (1996). The clinical features of the hereditary and nonereditary polyposis syndromes. Surgical Oncology Clinics of North America 5(3): 553-67.

 

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