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FAP
  The Lopez Family Used Their Family Tree to Assess Their Risk of FAP

By Miriam Komaromy, MD

Reviewed by Peggy Conrad, MS, CGC and Jonathan Terdiman, MD
Last updated August 4, 2000

 

Once a member of your immediate or extended family has been diagnosed with the hereditary colon cancer syndrome familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) you may want to find out whether you, your children or other members of your family are at risk for the syndrome. To do this, you will need to document your family medical history. Genetic professionals call this making a pedigree, you might think of it as drawing a family tree. This is where you'll find the vital clues that can help sort out whether your family is at risk for the syndrome and help you determine which family members at risk should consider screening and genetic tests to clarify their FAP status. To help you understand how this process works, let's take a look at one FAP family's pedigree, that of the Lopez family.
 
 
 

Risk and the Lopez Family

Lydia
When Lydia Lopez developed colon cancer symptoms at age 42, she underwent a colonoscopy, which revealed not only colon cancer but the hundreds of colon polyps characteristic of FAP.

 

 

Knowing that Lydia has FAP, we can now look for clues in her family tree that identify other people with FAP — even people that may not have been diagnosed while they were alive. Take Lydia's mother, Maria, and her grandmother, Consuelo: Both died from colon cancer at extremely early ages. In light of Lydia's diagnosis, most medical professionals would assume that both mother and grandmother had the syndrome, which Lydia then inherited.

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Lydia's Uncle and His Family


If you look at the pedigree, you'll see that Lydia's mother had a brother, Juan, who could also have inherited FAP from their mother (Consuelo). However, because Juan is alive and well at 82, this scenario is unlikely, since FAP patients commonly develop colon polyps at a young age and, if they leave their polyps untreated, often develop colon cancer by their mid-30s.

If Juan does not have FAP, he could not have passed the syndrome on to his children, which means they don't need to be tested or screened for FAP. Instead, they should simply follow the much less stringent colon cancer screening guidelines recommended for the population at large — that is, people with no family history of FAP.

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Lydia's Sister and Her Family

As we continue to look at the family tree, we see that among Lydia's siblings, Dolores, at age 52, is also fairly unlikely to have FAP since she has not yet developed any colon cancer symptoms. However, since FAP patients vary tremendously in the ages at which they develop polyps and symptoms, Dolores should still undergo screening to confirm that she is polyp-free.

If Dolores' screening shows an absence of polyps, it's very unlikely that she has FAP. And since Dolores' children could only have inherited FAP if the syndrome was present in their mother, most experts would agree that they are not at risk for FAP and thus only need to follow routine colon cancer screening guidelines.

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Lydia's Brother and His Family
Because Lydia's brother, José, is only 40 years old, he may have FAP even though he has yet to manifest any symptoms. José should therefore be immediately screened for colon cancer via sigmoidoscopy. If his doctor finds polyps, he will counsel José regarding surgical options to remove his colon, since this is the only surefire way to prevent the almost inevitable development of colon cancer in FAP patients. If José does indeed have FAP, his children, George and Carlos, are at risk as well — and at age 10, George is old enough to begin yearly screening by sigmoidoscopy.

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Lydia's Children
Lydia has two children, both of whom are at high risk for FAP (each has a 50 percent chance of having inherited FAP from Lydia). Both are old enough to begin having annual sigmoidoscopies.

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Genetic Testing and the Lopez Family

In addition to providing clues about individual's risk for FAP (and, correspondingly, colon cancer), a family's medical history can also provide helpful information about who should consider genetic testing. Once again, let's take a look at the Lopez family.

If Lydia — who has already received a FAP diagnosis — were to test positive for one of the genetic mutations that cause FAP, other family members could benefit enormously from the information. For Lydia's children (Mark and Katherine) and José's sons (George and Carlos), a negative genetic test result could save them from years of invasive screening procedures and cancer anxiety.

If, on the other hand, Lydia were to take a genetic test, but no mutation was found, no one else in the family could benefit from testing. This is because doctors would have to assume that whatever genetic mutation was causing the Lopez family's FAP was not detectable using currently available genetic tests. Lydia's children, and José's children, would then have to assume that they are at high risk for FAP and follow the appropriate screening procedures.

Genetic testing for FAP must begin with a family member who has been clinically diagnosed with the syndrome. If this initial genetic test detects a mutation, the genetic culprit for that family's FAP syndrome has been identified and other family members can now be tested to see if they carry the same mutation.

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