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From the Departments of Medical Genetics*
and
Pathology,
Haartman Institute, University of
Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; the Family Federation of
Finland,
Helsinki, Finland; the Departments
of Surgery of the Central Hospitals of
Joensuu,§
Mikkeli,¶
Lappeenranta,||
Kajaani,**
Kotka,

Savonlinna,

and
Jyväskylä,§§
Finland;
the Departments of Surgery¶¶
and Internal
Medicine,||||
Kuopio University Hospital, Kuopio,
Finland; the Second Department of
Surgery,***
Helsinki University
Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland; and the Human Cancer Genetics
Program,


Comprehensive Cancer Center, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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MSI can be seen at an early stage in HNPCC tumors, but usually at later stages in sporadic colorectal tumorigenesis.4 Adenomas from patients with HNPCC frequently show MSI as opposed to 0 to 3% of apparently sporadic colorectal adenomas.5,6 The frequency of the MSI is 80 to 95% in HNPCC cancers6-8 and 10 to 15% in sporadic colorectal cancers.7-10 The fact that a considerable proportion of sporadic colorectal cancers displays MSI makes microsatellite analysis a relatively unspecific marker for HNPCC when applied to malignant tumors.11
Most colorectal cancers arise within a pre-existing epithelial neoplasm, an adenoma, though only a small proportion of adenomas progresses to malignancy.12 Adenoma is the precursor lesion in familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), a rare inherited cancer syndrome. By contrast, in the more common hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC), typically very few if any adenomas are seen, and their role in the process leading to cancer is less clear.13-15 However, it has been hypothesized that adenomas in HNPCC patients are more likely to progress to carcinoma than are adenomas in the general population.13 Nevertheless, colonoscopic screening in individuals with HNPCC gene mutations provides an efficient method of cancer prevention.16 In a recently completed 15-year screening program aimed at HNPCC mutation-positive individuals, both early detection of cancer and removal of premalignant adenomas resulted in reduction in cancer morbidity and mortality (Järvinen HJ, Aarnio M, Mustonen H, Aktan-Collan K, Aaltonen LA, Peltomäki P, de la Chapelle A, Mecklin J-P, submitted). Similar but less dramatic benefits of colonoscopic cancer surveillance in the general population have been observed before.17 Given the high (>80%) risk of colorectal cancer in individuals who have germline HNPCC mutations18,19 and the common occurrence of metachronous tumors in HNPCC patients, it is highly desirable to determine which patients with colorectal adenoma have HNPCC. This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that the determination of microsatellite instability (MSI) in adenomas, a relatively simple procedure, can serve as a screening method for this purpose.
| Materials and Methods |
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We screened 402 adenoma specimens obtained from 378 patients for MSI. The number of adenomas obtained from each individual varied from one to seven, but was typically one. Of the adenomas, 71% were distal, 17.5% were proximal, and in 11.5% of cases the site of the adenoma was not reported. The individuals ranged in age from 23 to 90 years with a mean age of 66 years. Fresh-frozen samples were collected between June 1994 and June 1998 at nine large regional hospitals in eastern Finland. Informed consent was obtained from the patients. The design of the study called for accrual of every adenoma whenever this was technically possible. No selection in favor of adenomas from young patients, patients with a family history of cancer, or clinical parameters was allowed. However, in view of the large number of participating hospitals, physicians, and other personnel, some such unintentional selection may nevertheless have occurred. Clearly, the main reason for not including adenomas was small tumor size. It is not feasible to divide very small adenomas, and procuring a good specimen for histological analysis had precedence over procuring a specimen for this study. Most (338, 84%) of the samples were obtained during colonoscopy and some (45, 11%) during surgery; information was not available in 19 cases. Pathologists at the respective hospitals histologically evaluated the lesions. The patient data were cross-linked with the Finnish HNPCC registry data and Finnish Cancer Registry data. The series was found to contain 11 patients from known HNPCC families. Seven families segregate characterized MLH1 mutations. DNA from 2497 cancer-free anonymous blood donors (age range, 1865) from the eastern part of Finland were collected at local Finnish Red Cross Blood Transfusion Centers proportional to the geographic distribution of tumors collected from the participating hospitals and were used as population controls in mutation studies.
Analysis of MSI
DNA extracted from the adenoma tissue was studied for MSI using BAT26 and TGF-ßRII mononucleotide (polyA) markers by fluorescence-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The forward and reverse primers used were, for BAT26: forward, TGA CTA CTT TTG ACT TCA GCC; reverse, AAC CAT TCA ACA TTT TTA ACC; for TGF-ßRII: forward, CTT TAT TCT GGA AGA TGC TG; reverse, GAA GAA AGT CTC ACC AGG C. PCR reactions were carried out in a 10-µl reaction volume containing 100 ng genomic DNA, 1x PCR buffer (Perkin Elmer Applied Biosystems Division, Foster City, CA), 200 µmol/L of each dNTP (Finnzymes, Espoo, Finland), 300 µmol/L (TGF-ßRII) or 600 µmol/L (BAT26) of each primer and 1.5 units of AmpliTaqGOLD polymerase (Perkin Elmer). The MgCl2 concentration was 1.5 mmol/L. The following PCR cycles were used for amplification: BAT26: 95° for 10 minutes, 30 cycles of 95° for 45 seconds, 55° for 1 minute, 72° for 30 seconds and TGF-ßRII: 94° for 10 minutes, 28 cycles of 94° for 30 seconds, 55° for 75 seconds, 72° for 20 seconds. Final extension was 72° for 10 minutes. PCR products were loaded on a 6% polyacrylamide 8-mol/L urea gel and run in an ABI PRISM 377DNA Sequencer (Perkin Elmer) according to manufacturers instructions. The data were collected automatically and analyzed by the GeneScan 3.1 software (Perkin Elmer). From all MSI patients normal tissue (normal mucosa or venous blood) DNA was available and the MSI analysis was repeated by comparing paired normal/adenoma DNA pairs to confirm somatic origin of the aberrant alleles.
Detection of Mutations
All 378 patients were scrutinized for the three most common
mismatch repair gene mutations in Finland. In approximately half of all
cases normal tissue was not available for mutation analysis, and
adenoma DNA was used. Founder mutation 1 is a 3.5-kb genomic deletion
of MLH1 comprising exon 16. Founder mutation 2 is
MLH1 exon 6 splice site mutation G
A at 4541.
Founder mutation 3 is MLH1 exon 4 missense type of change
T
G at 320. Together these three mutations account for 79% (65/82)
of mutation-positive HNPCC families diagnosed in Finland20
(unpublished data). Mutation 1 was detected by a PCR-based method that
has been described previously.21
Mutations
221
and 3 were detected by allele-specific oligonucleotide
hybridization. The protocol for mutation 3 detection is identical with
that of mutation 2, except that the hybridization temperature is
62°C. The forward and reverse primers used for mutation 3 detection
were: forward, CAG ATA ACC TTT CCC TTT GGT G; reverse, TAT GCA CAC TTT
CCA TCA GC and the PCR reactions were carried out in 20-µl reaction
volume containing 100 ng genomic DNA, 1x PCR buffer (Perkin Elmer),
500 µmol/L of each dNTP (Finnzymes), 700 µmol/L of each primer and
1 unit of AmpliTaqGOLD polymerase (Perkin Elmer). The
MgCl2 concentration was 2.75 mmol/L. The
following PCR cycles were used for amplification: 95° for 10 minutes,
40 cycles of 95° for 1 minute, 57° for 1 minute, 72° for 1
minute. Final extension was 72° for 10 minutes. PCR products were run
in 2% agarose (NuSieve) gel to verify the amplification, thus avoiding
the need for hybridization with a wild-type probe. PCR products from
three individuals were pooled together into the filter. Filters were
hybridized with a probe containing the mutant sequence (mutation 2: 5'
CTT CTG TTC AAG TGG AGG AC 3', mutation 3: 5' CTT TGG CCA GCA TAA GCC
AT 3'). If a positive signal was obtained, the respective samples were
rehybridized separately in a new filter.
If none of the founder mutations was detected in the MSI samples, full mutation analysis of MLH1 and MSH2 was performed by direct genomic sequencing of the coding exons, including the flanking intron region and promoter region, as previously described.11 Normal tissue DNA from members of known HNPCC families was studied for the mutation known to segregate in the family even if the adenoma of the patient was microsatellite-stable (MSS).
To estimate roughly the population frequency of the founder mutations studied, the two most frequent defects, mutations 1 and 2, were analyzed from DNA derived from 2497 healthy anonymous blood donors. A rapid method to lyse white cells from 0.5 ml of whole blood was used.22 Mutation 1 was screened for as previously described21 with the exception of a reverse primer (5'-GAACACATCATCAAGATGGAGAGCC-3') located in intron 16, downstream from the deletion breakpoint, instead of the previously published reverse primer located in exon 17. Mutation 2 was screened for by a solid phase minisequencing method23 suitable for semiautomated screening of single nucleotide changes.
| Results |
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T at
1975 20
in one patient). No mutation was detected in the
sixth MSI patient, who did not belong to a known HNPCC family (Table 1)
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None of the three founder mutations was detected in the 372 MSS patients. Eight MSS samples failed in mutation 1 analysis, one sample failed in mutation 2 analysis, and four samples failed in mutation 3 analysis. No cases with mutation 1 and no cases with mutation 2 were detected among the 2424 cancer-free anonymous blood donors (73 samples failed) with the screening methods used. The carrier frequency of these mutations in cancer-free population appears to be low, perhaps less than 1/2500 or 0.0004% in the geographic area of highest HNPCC incidence in Finland.
| Discussion |
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Considering the proportion of HNPCC (patients with MLH1 or MSH2 mutations11 ) of all colorectal carcinomas (approximately 2%), the proportion of HNPCC in the current series of adenoma patients, 1.6%, may appear unexpectedly high, as adenomas frequently occur in the general population. In addition to possible bias in patient selection, the high frequency of mutation-positive individuals is explained by the fact that the Finnish HNPCC screening program is actively conducted in the participating hospitals. Hundreds of at-risk individuals undergo colonoscopic tumor screening in these centers.
Because of the quasimonomorphic nature of the BAT26 polyA tract (size variation is uncommon between germline alleles), this marker can be used to screen initially for MSI without matching normal DNA.25 However, possible MSI cases should be reanalyzed with a matching normal DNA to confirm the somatic origin of the aberrant alleles.24
Three out of seven (43%) MSI lesions carried somatic truncating mutations of the TGF-ßRII gene. These mutations have also previously been found in adenomas from individuals with HNPCC,26 suggesting that TGF-ßRII inactivation is an early event in HNPCC colon neoplasia. The sporadic MSI adenoma also displayed a somatic TGF-ßRII mutation. These findings do not support the notion that TGF-ßRII mutations are late events in MSI tumors.27 Obviously, larger numbers of samples need to be analyzed to clarify this issue.
MSI in adenomas appears to be a relatively specific pointer for HNPCC. As MSI is very rare in sporadic adenomas, screening such lesions routinely for MSI may not be a high priority. However, MSI analysis in adenomas is likely to be useful in cases where clinical features or family history suggest hereditary predisposition. For example, MSI analysis in an adenoma patient from a colon cancer family can give important clues to the true risk status of such an individual. This aspect is illustrated in the two cases where the adenoma patients were members of known HNPCC families, but had MSI-negative adenomas and were demonstrated not to carry the mutation segregating in the family. Also, in a prospective, long-term colonoscopic screening organized in 22 Finnish families, adenoma was removed in 12 at-risk family members who subsequently proved to be mutation-negative in predictive tests (Järvinen HJ, Aarnio M, Mustonen H, Aktan-Collan K, Aaltonen LA, Peltomäki P, de la Chapelle A, Mecklin J-P, submitted). The case for using MSI analysis in adenomas is even stronger in colon cancer families with MSI tumors and unidentified mutations. Adenomas are common in the general population, but the detection of an adenoma in colonoscopic screening for hereditary colon cancer frequently causes uncertainty and confusion. MSI analysis adds an important parameter to be considered in the interpretation of the patients cancer risk.
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| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by grants from the Finnish Cancer Society, the Academy of Finland, the Sigrid Juselius Foundation, the Federation of the Finnish Insurance Companies, Duodecim, Ida Montin Foundation, Jalmari and Rauha Ahokas Foundation, Emil Aaltonen Foundation, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Biocentrum Helsinki, European Commission (contract BMH4-CT960772), and National Institutes of Health grants CA67941 and CA16058. A. L. is a Ph.D. student of the Helsinki Biomedical Graduate School.
Accepted for publication August 24, 1999.
| References |
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