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FAP
  The Testing Process for FAP
fap genetic testing

By Miriam Komaromy, MD

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

If you believe you may have inherited FAP (familial adenomatous polyposis), a medical condition that puts people at extreme risk for colon cancer, one of the first things you might do is ask your doctor if you can get an immediate DNA test so that you can "know for sure." Although this is a logical (and increasingly common) request, you need to understand that your doctor will only give you a genetic test under some very specific circumstances. In fact, investigating your family's medical history is almost always the first step in understanding how your genetic inheritance is likely to affect your health.

 

 

fap genetic testing

If your doctor does decide that you are a good candidate for genetic testing, here are some things you will want to know about the test:

 
 
 

Testing the APC Gene

FAP is caused by inheriting a defective copy of a specific gene (the adenomatous polyposis coli, or APC, gene). When working properly, this gene produces a special substance (a protein) that keeps polyps from developing in the colon. When this gene is defective, the protein no longer functions properly, and polyps begin to appear. Without treatment, colon cancer almost inevitably develops from one or more of these polyps.

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fap genetic testing

The Most Common Method: Protein Truncation Testing

Commercial laboratories employ a variety of methods to detect potentially cancer-causing mutations in human genes. However, detecting a FAP mutation is difficult because the APC gene is very large, and a mutation can occur anywhere in the gene. Current APC gene tests involve successive steps depending on what is found in any given diagnostic test.

Today, the most widely available FAP genetic test is protein truncation testing, or PTT. Researchers have discovered that when the APC gene is defective, or mutated, it usually produces a protein that is shorter than those created by normal versions of the gene. Thus, one way to test for a genetic mutation that causes FAP is to look for evidence that APC gene proteins are truncated, or shorter.

 

Other types of APC gene tests can also be performed and may soon be widely available. However, it's important to understand that none of the gene tests is perfect (see below), and a gene mutation can be present but missed.

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The Drawbacks of Protein Truncation Testing

fap genetic testing
Currently available tests are not capable of detecting all of the mutations in the APC gene that can cause FAP.
fap genetic testing
You should also know that even if a defective APC gene is indeed the culprit for FAP in your family, APC gene testing may not be able to help you sort out which individuals have (or haven't) inherited the condition. This is because currently available tests are not capable of detecting all of the mutations in the APC gene that can cause FAP.

Take the case of PTT: Not all APC gene alterations that cause FAP will be detected when this test is administered. Indeed, positive PTT gene test results are only found in roughly eighty percent of FAP families tested. However, if a member of your family has been clinically diagnosed with FAP and also has a positive PTT test, this test will subsequently serve as an extremely reliable way of determining whether you or any other members of your family carry that mutation.

Unfortunately, if the PTT tests of clinically proven FAP patients in your family come back "normal," the news is not necessarily good. It simply demonstrates that this particular test has not detected the genetic cause of your family's FAP. (And remember, twenty percent of all FAP families will have defective APC genes that do not produce positive PTT results when tested.) If this is the case for your family, you must assume that you are at high risk for FAP (and therefore colon cancer) since this test cannot help your particular family sort out which individual members are (and are not) genetically predisposed to the disease.

In other words, the absence of a positive gene test in a family that appears to have FAP does not mean that the family does not have FAP. It only means that the currently available testing technology was unable to detect the gene alteration in the family.

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Further Ways to Test the APC Gene

As we learn more about the APC gene and FAP, it may become increasingly important to perform additional genetic tests to reveal the precise alteration that's present in the gene in a particular family.

This is often done by sequencing the portion of the gene that is suspected to harbor the alteration. It's important to realize, however, that few laboratories will proceed to sequencing without first identifying a potential mutation via PTT or another preliminary blood test. When a gene is sequenced, doctors are able to learn the exact order of the nucleotide bases that make up the gene, and how that order was changed by the mutation.


fap genetic testing
Researchers have already indentified a few specific APC mutations that appear to cause very sever polyposis.
fap genetic testing
Pinpointing the precise mutation has the potential to provide extremely valuable information about the specific nature of a family's FAP condition. Although this area of genetic medicine is rapidly evolving (and constantly changing), scientists believe that understanding the exact nature of the mutation may help them predict how severe the FAP will be. For example, the number of polyps that may develop, where in the colon they are likely to appear, and what other FAP-associated conditions are more likely to occur. Researchers have already identified a few specific APC mutations that appear to cause very severe polyposis (the extreme proliferation of polyps).

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Children and Testing

While doctors do not normally recommend that children receive genetic testing for most adult-onset inherited diseases, they make an exception with FAP because it can produce polyps and cancer in very young patients. Because of this high risk, doctors recommend that children from families in which FAP is known to exist undergo annual clinical screening via sigmoidoscopy starting as early as age 10. If you are able to determine, through genetic testing, which specific children do and do not carry the mutation(s), you may be able to spare your child these regular invasive screenings. (If, however, your child is found to carry the genetic mutation, he or she will have to undergo these screenings, plus perhaps take other preventive measures.)

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