Hypothesis: Possible role of retinoic acid therapy in patients with biallelic mismatch repair gene defects

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Sven Gottschling - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Harald Reinhard - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Constanze Pagenstecher - , University of Bonn (Author)
  • Stefan Krüger - , Department of Surgical Research, Hereditary Cancer Syndrome Center (Author)
  • Jochen Raedle - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Guido Plotz - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Wolfram Henn - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Reinhard Buettner - , University of Bonn (Author)
  • Sascha Meyer - , Saarland University (Author)
  • Norbert Graf - , Saarland University (Author)

Abstract

A boy showing symptoms of a Turcot-like childhood cancer syndrome together with stigmata of neurofibromatosis type I is reported. His brother suffers from an infantile myofibromatosis, and a sister died of glioblastoma at age 7. Another 7-year-old brother is so far clinically unaffected. The parents are consanguineous. Molecular diagnosis in the index patient revealed a constitutional homozygous mutation of the mismatch repair gene PMS2. The patient was in remission of his glioblastoma (WHO grade IV) after multimodal treatment followed by retinoic acid chemoprevention for 7 years. After discontinuation of retinoic acid medication, he developed a relapse of his brain tumour together with the simultaneous occurrence of three other different HNPCC-related carcinomas. We think that retinoic acid might have provided an effective chemoprevention in this patient with homozygous mismatch repair gene defect. We propose to take a retinoic acid chemoprevention into account in children with proven biallelic PMS2 mismatch repair mutations being at highest risk concerning the development of a malignancy.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)225-229
Number of pages5
JournalEuropean journal of pediatrics
Volume167
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2008
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 17387511

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Childhood cancer syndrome, Lynch, PMS2, Retinoic acid, Turcot