Guides hereditary cancer risk assessment with genetic testing criteria and management recommendations. Use when evaluating hereditary cancer risk, ordering genetic testing, or managing high-risk patients.
Guides hereditary cancer risk assessment with genetic testing criteria and management recommendations.
Approximately 5–10% of all cancers are caused by inherited germline mutations. Identifying hereditary cancer syndromes has direct therapeutic implications: BRCA1/2-mutated cancers respond to PARP inhibitors and platinum chemotherapy; Lynch syndrome (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2, EPCAM) tumors are MSI-high and respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors; Li-Fraumeni syndrome requires intensive multi-organ surveillance. Beyond the index patient, identifying a hereditary syndrome triggers cascade testing of at-risk family members and potentially life-saving risk-reduction strategies.
NCCN Genetic/Familial High-Risk Assessment guidelines define testing criteria and management recommendations. ASCO recommends genetic counseling and testing when results will influence management of the patient or family members. Failure to identify hereditary cancer syndromes exposes patients to inferior treatment selection, family members to unrecognized cancer risk, and institutions to malpractice liability. Universal tumor screening for Lynch syndrome in all colorectal and endometrial cancers is now standard of care per NCCN guidelines.
NCCN criteria for BRCA1/2 genetic testing (selected triggers):
Lynch syndrome (universal tumor screening):
Other hereditary syndromes to consider:
| Syndrome | Gene(s) | Associated Cancers | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Li-Fraumeni | TP53 | Breast, sarcoma, brain, adrenocortical, leukemia | Multiple primaries, very young onset, adrenocortical carcinoma |
| Cowden | PTEN | Breast, thyroid, endometrial, renal | Macrocephaly, mucocutaneous lesions, thyroid nodules |
| FAP | APC | Colorectal, duodenal, thyroid, desmoid | >100 colorectal polyps, polyps in teens |
| Attenuated FAP | APC (select mutations), MUTYH (biallelic) | Colorectal | 10–99 adenomatous polyps |
| CDH1 | CDH1 | Diffuse gastric cancer, lobular breast cancer | Family history of diffuse gastric cancer |
| VHL | VHL | Renal cell (clear cell), pheochromocytoma, CNS hemangioblastoma | Multiple bilateral renal tumors at young age |
| MEN1/MEN2 | MEN1, RET | Parathyroid, pituitary, pancreatic NET (MEN1); medullary thyroid, pheo (MEN2) | Multiple endocrine tumors |
| Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer | CDH1 | Diffuse gastric, lobular breast | Signet ring cell histology in family |
Pre-test genetic counseling must include:
Testing platform selection:
Pathogenic/Likely Pathogenic variant identified:
| Finding | Treatment Implications | Surveillance Implications |
|---|---|---|
| BRCA1/2 | PARP inhibitors (olaparib, talazoparib, rucaparib); platinum sensitivity | Breast MRI annually starting age 25; consider risk-reducing mastectomy; risk-reducing salpingo-oophorectomy age 35–40 (BRCA1) or 40–45 (BRCA2) |
| Lynch (MLH1/MSH2/MSH6/PMS2) | Checkpoint inhibitor eligibility (MSI-H/dMMR); aspirin chemoprevention | Colonoscopy every 1–2 years starting age 20–25; consider risk-reducing hysterectomy after childbearing |
| TP53 (Li-Fraumeni) | Avoid radiation therapy when possible | Whole-body MRI annually; breast MRI annually age 20+; comprehensive surveillance protocol |
| CDH1 | Consider prophylactic total gastrectomy | Annual breast MRI for lobular breast cancer surveillance |
| APC (FAP) | — | Colonoscopy annually starting age 10–12; colectomy when polyps unmanageable |
| PALB2 | PARP inhibitor eligibility; platinum sensitivity | Breast MRI annually starting age 30; consider risk-reducing mastectomy |
| ATM, CHEK2 | Emerging targeted therapy data | Enhanced breast surveillance (CHEK2: annual breast MRI); CHEK2: colonoscopy starting age 40 |
VUS (Variant of Uncertain Significance):
Negative result (no pathogenic variant found):
When a pathogenic variant is identified:
Risk-reduction strategies by syndrome: