Adenocarcinoma of the pancreas is the fifth leading cause of cancer death in the United States.[1] It has a lifetime incidence of approximately one in 150 persons in the United States and a male-to-female ratio of approximately 1.3 to 1.[2]
Adenocarcinoma of the pancreas isthe fifth leading cause of cancer death in the United States.[1] It hasa lifetime incidence of approximately one in 150 persons in the UnitedStates and a male-to-female ratio of approximately 1.3 to 1.[2]
Most patients present with advanced inoperable disease, and the overallsurvival is less than 5% at five years.[3] However, for patients presentingearly, without clinical evidence of metastasis, pancreaticoduodenectomycan result in a five-year survival of approximately 25%.[4]
Techniques to detect early cancer in at-risk patients, before they developinoperable disease, could save many lives. Pancreatic cancer has a significant,although generally under-recognized, hereditary predisposition, and patientswith this hereditary predisposition constitute an at-risk population towhich screening techniques could be applied.
For many hereditary cancers, such as familial polyposis coli, hereditarynonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC), or familial breast cancer, a familialtendency toward cancer development can often be easily identified on thebasis of a pattern of autosomal dominant inheritance with high penetrance.
In contrast, even for patients with pancreatic cancer in whom a hereditarypredisposition has been identified, clinical features alone often failto raise suspicion of hereditary cancer. Despite these difficulties, severalgenes responsible for at least part of this hereditary predisposition haverecently been identified.
Once the genes responsible for an inherited predisposition are characterized,they can be used to identify and manage gene carriers. Indeed, commercialtesting for hereditary-cancer-predisposing genes is becoming increasinglyavailable. However, until technologic advances enable routine genetic testingof virtually all cancer patients, the most important task for the clinicianconsidering cancer patients for genetic testing will remain the identificationof those patients who carry a hereditary predisposition.
The molecular genetic profile of pancreatic cancer has been relativelywell characterized, compared with that of some other cancers. Infiltratingadenocar-cinoma of the pancreas has a unique genetic profile, with somaticmutations of the K-ras gene (more than 90% of tumors)[5,6] and the p53gene (50% to 75%),[7] and genetic inactivation of the p16 gene (approximately80%)[8] and the DPC4 (SMAD-4) gene (50%).[9]
Unlike colorectal cancers, pancreatic cancers do not have APC mutations.[10,11]Similarly, microsatellite instability suggestive of an inherited defectin one of the mismatch repair genes is an unusual finding in pancreaticcancer.[12]
The genes mutated in sporadic cancers are frequently also responsiblefor hereditary cancers. Thus, this understanding of the molecular geneticsof infiltrating pancreatic cancer provides a foundation for examining themolecular basis for hereditary pancreatic cancer, which will be reviewedin the next article in this series.
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