What Is Colon Cancer Genetic Testing?
Colon cancer genetic testing is a blood test that can tell you
whether you carry a rare changed, or mutated,
gene that can cause
colon cancer. Although most people who get colon
cancer do not have one of these mutated genes, having them greatly increases
your chance of getting colon cancer.
Colon cancer develops in the
large
intestine
when cells change and grow out of control. Colon cancer is
also called colorectal cancer because it can occur in both the colon and in the
lowest section of the colon, which is called the rectum.
Colon cancer almost always begins as small growths on the inner
wall of the colon called
polyps. A doctor can find and remove polyps during a
colonoscopy, a test in which a doctor uses a flexible
video camera or scope to look at the inside of the colon. If a close member of
your family, such as your brother, sister, or parent, has had colon cancer,
doctors usually recommend screening with colonoscopy every 5 years starting at
age 40, or 10 years earlier than the youngest age at which a member of your
family was diagnosed with colorectal cancer.
The most common genetic changes occur in two conditions: familial
adenomatous polyposis (FAP) and hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer
(HNPCC). In these conditions, screening often starts even sooner than age
40.
Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
FAP develops because of a changed gene that causes hundreds or
thousands of polyps to grow in the colon. The number of polyps increases with
age. If one of your parents has FAP, you have a 50% chance of having the
changed gene and the disease.
People with FAP have an almost 100% chance of getting colorectal
cancer.1, 2 They can develop
polyps in their 20s and 30s, or even earlier. People with FAP may decide to
have their colons removed to prevent colon cancer.
Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) or Lynch syndrome
HNPCC can cause polyps in the colon, but not as many as FAP.
Changes in any of four or more different genes can cause HNPCC. These changes
also increase the risk for other cancers, including cancer of the endometrium,
ovaries, and other organs.
Having HNPCC does not mean you definitely will develop colon
cancer, but it does increase your chances. If you have one parent who has
HNPCC, you have a 50% chance of having one or more of these gene changes. If
both parents have it, your chances of getting it are about 80%. (Not every
person with the genes will get the condition, and not everyone with the
condition will have the abnormal gene.)
If you have a strong family history of colon cancer, you may want
to have a blood test to look for changed genes. Testing is most reliable when
the family member that has colon cancer, FAP, or HNPCC also tests positive for
the abnormal gene. Genetic testing may be recommended if:
- You have at least three relatives who have had
colon cancer, and at least one of them is a parent, brother, or
sister.
- Those relatives are spread over two generations in a row
(for example, a grandparent and a parent).
- One of those relatives
got cancer before age 50.