Article Data

  • Views 196
  • Dowloads 121

Case Reports

Open Access

Rectal carcinoma after radiotherapy for cervical carcinoma in patients with a family history of colorectal carcinoma: report of two cases

  • B. Melichar1,2,*,
  • A. Ryska3
  • A. Krepelova4
  • P. Holeckova5

1Departments of Oncology & Radiotherapy, Charles University Medical School and Teaching Hospital, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic

2Departments of Medicine, Charles University Medical School and Teaching Hospital, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic

3Departments of Pathology, Charles University Medical School and Teaching Hospital, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic

4Department of Medical Genetics, Charles University 2rd Medical School and Teaching Hospital Motol, Prague,Czech Republic

5Department of Oncology, Charles University 1st Medical School and Teaching Hospital Bulovka, Prague, Czech Republic

DOI: 10.12892/ejgo200704319 Vol.28,Issue 4,July 2007 pp.319-321

Published: 10 July 2007

*Corresponding Author(s): B. Melichar E-mail:

Abstract

Rectal carcinoma is a rare, but well documented late complication of pelvic irradiation. Little is known about the factors predisposing to the development of radiation-associated rectal carcinoma. We present two patients who developed rectal carcinoma 17 and 26 years after radiotherapy for carcinoma of the uterine cervix. In one patient, mutation in exon 4 of the hMLH1 gene was detected. Radiation-associated rectal carcinoma represents a rare late toxicity of radiotherapy for cervical carcinoma that may occur in patients with a family history of colorectal carcinoma, including hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer.

Keywords

Cervical carcinoma; Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer; Radiotherapy; Rectal carcinoma

Cite and Share

B. Melichar,A. Ryska,A. Krepelova,P. Holeckova. Rectal carcinoma after radiotherapy for cervical carcinoma in patients with a family history of colorectal carcinoma: report of two cases. European Journal of Gynaecological Oncology. 2007. 28(4);319-321.

References

[1] Arai T., Nakano T., Fukuhisa K., Kasamatsu T., Tsunematsu R., Masubuchi K. et al.: "Second cancer after radiation therapy for cancer of the uterine cervix". Cancer, 1991, 67, 398.

[2] Boice J.D., Engholm G., Kleinerman R.A., Blettner M., Stovall M., Lisco H. et al.: "Radiation dose and second cancer risk in patients treated for cancer of the cervix". Radial. Res., 1988, 116, 3.

[3] Storm H.H.: "Second primary cancer after treatment for cervical cancer". Cancer, 1988, 61, 679.

[4] Kleinerman R.A., Boice J.D., Storm H.H., Sparen P., Andersen A., Pukkala E. et al.: "Second primary cancer after treatment for cervical cancer". Cancer, 1995, 76, 442.

[5] Chung D.C., Rustgi A.K.: "Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer syndrome: genetics and clinical implications". Ann. Intern Med., 2003, 138, 560.

[6] Ammon J.: "Secondary tumorigenesis after radiotherapy". In Ruther U., Nunnensiek C., Schmoll H.J. (eds.). Secondary Neoplasias following Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy, and Immunosuppression, Basel, Karger, 2000, 147.

[7] Shirouzu K., lsomoto H., Morodomi T., Ogata Y., Araki Y., Kakegawa T.: "Clinicopathologic characteristics of large bowel cancer developing after radiotherapy for uterine cervical cancer" Dis. Colon Rectum, 1994, 37, 1245.

[8] Trojan J., Zeuzem S., Randolph A., Hemmerle C., Brieger A., Raedle J. et al.: "Functional analysis of hMLH l variants and HNPCC-related mutations using a human expression system". Gastroenterology, 2002, 122, 211.

[9] Franchitto A., Pichierri P., Genuardi M., DeSantis A., Palitti F "Investigation of G2-phase chromosomal radiosensitivity in hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer cells". Int. J. Radial. Biol., 2001, 77, 773.

[10] Tsuji T., Sawai T., Nakagoe T., Hidaka S., Shibasaki S., Tanaka K., et al.: "Genetic analysis of radiation-associated rectal cancer". J. Gastroenterol., 2003, 38, 1185.

Abstracted / indexed in

Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch) Created as SCI in 1964, Science Citation Index Expanded now indexes over 9,500 of the world’s most impactful journals across 178 scientific disciplines. More than 53 million records and 1.18 billion cited references date back from 1900 to present.

Biological Abstracts Easily discover critical journal coverage of the life sciences with Biological Abstracts, produced by the Web of Science Group, with topics ranging from botany to microbiology to pharmacology. Including BIOSIS indexing and MeSH terms, specialized indexing in Biological Abstracts helps you to discover more accurate, context-sensitive results.

Google Scholar Google Scholar is a freely accessible web search engine that indexes the full text or metadata of scholarly literature across an array of publishing formats and disciplines.

JournalSeek Genamics JournalSeek is the largest completely categorized database of freely available journal information available on the internet. The database presently contains 39226 titles. Journal information includes the description (aims and scope), journal abbreviation, journal homepage link, subject category and ISSN.

Current Contents - Clinical Medicine Current Contents - Clinical Medicine provides easy access to complete tables of contents, abstracts, bibliographic information and all other significant items in recently published issues from over 1,000 leading journals in clinical medicine.

BIOSIS Previews BIOSIS Previews is an English-language, bibliographic database service, with abstracts and citation indexing. It is part of Clarivate Analytics Web of Science suite. BIOSIS Previews indexes data from 1926 to the present.

Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition aims to evaluate a journal’s value from multiple perspectives including the journal impact factor, descriptive data about a journal’s open access content as well as contributing authors, and provide readers a transparent and publisher-neutral data & statistics information about the journal.

Submission Turnaround Time

Conferences

Top