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FAP
  What Is FAP?
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By Miriam Komaromy, MD

Reviewed by Peggy Conrad, MS, CGC and Jonathan Terdiman, MD
Last updated August 1, 2000

 

Familial adenomatous polyposis, or FAP, describes an inherited medical syndrome that puts affected individuals at enormous risk for the early development of colon cancer unless they take preventive action.

 
 
 

What Is FAP?

Almost all people with FAP will develop colon cancer if they do not get treatment.
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FAP occurs when a person is born with a mutation in a specific gene called the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. People born with FAP are at nearly 100 percent risk of developing colon cancer if they do not undergo surgery. They also have an elevated risk of contracting certain other types of cancer. Among them are cancer of the small bowel (the part of the digestive tract located above the colon and rectum); cancer of the thyroid and cancer of the brain, as well as a rare form of childhood liver cancer.

People with FAP account for roughly one percent of all colon cancer cases. About 1 in every 8,000 people has FAP.

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How Does FAP Cause Colon Cancer?

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The colon illustrated above is riddled with polyps, which is typical in FAP patients.
Typically, individuals with FAP begin developing polyps, or small mushroom-like growths, in their colon and rectum by their teenage years. However, some may start developing these polyps much earlier, as children.

Polyps are believed to be the first stage in nearly all cases of colon cancer, not just those that occur in FAP. The difference in FAP is the quantity and early appearance of these growths. Unlike others diagnosed with colon cancer, who typically have fewer than ten polyps and usually do not begin developing them
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What Determines an FAP Diagnosis?

A finding of more than 100 adenomatous polyps in a patient's colon or rectum,

OR

A finding of less than 100 adenomatous polyps in the colon or rectum of a patient who has a relative who has been diagnosed with FAP.
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until they're in their 50s, FAP patients will develop hundreds or even thousands of polyps much earlier in their lives. Once these polyps begin to appear, some will almost always become cancerous if left untreated. As a result, individuals with FAP tend to develop colon cancer much earlier than the general population: at an average age of 39, as opposed to 65.

A rare related syndrome called attenuated FAP (AFAP), is sometimes diagnosed when patients have less than 100 polyps. Although patients with AFAP are still strongly predisposed to colon cancer, they tend not to get diagnosed with cancer until about a decade later than those who have "classic" FAP. It's important to note, however, that these are averages, and cancerous polyps often develop at much earlier ages — even in childhood.

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Family Medical History

Polyps in the colon and rectum rarely produce symptoms. And because most people aren't routinely screened for colon cancer until they're in their 50s, polyps can easily go undetected in younger people. As a result, doctors must rely on clues from a patient's family medical history to diagnose the syndrome in time to make a difference. For example, when other family members have been diagnosed with the FAP syndrome, or have developed colon cancer at an unusually early age.
Colon Cancer:
Average Age of Onset
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FAP is inherited in what's called autosomal dominant fashion. This means that a person only needs to inherit one mutated version of an FAP associated gene in order to have FAP and a high risk for cancer. Because of the way we inherit genes, if one of your parents has FAP, you have a 50 percent chance of inheriting it. Likewise, if you have FAP, your children have a 50 percent chance of inheriting it.

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Screening and Prevention

In families with a history of FAP, screening for polyps should begin between age 10 and 12, and be repeated every year until polyps appear. Once polyps appear, removal of the colon is usually recommended because of the near inevitability of developing colon cancer, though this may be put off for several years if the polyps are still very small.

If there has been a lot of colon cancer or colon polyps in your family, or colon cancer has been diagnosed at an unusually early age in close relatives,
you should:

  • Analyze your family medical history with a genetics specialist to determine if you might have FAP.
  • Have a doctor examine you for certain physical features that provide clues which suggest that you may have FAP.
  • Consider genetic testing for mutations in the APC gene to determine which family members have inherited FAP, although this is not usually the first step in making the diagnosis of FAP in a family.

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References

Bertario, L. et al. (1997). Recommendations for clinical management of familial adenomatous polyposis. Tumori 83: 800-803.

Jarvinen, H. (1992). Epidemiology of familiial adenomatous polyposis in Finland: inpact of screening on colorectal cancer rate and suvival. Gut 33: 357-360.

Ivanovich, J. et al. (1999). A practical approach to familial and hereditary colorectal cancer. Excerpta Medica 107: 68-77.

 

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