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Muir-Torre syndrome
An expression of the Lynch II cancer family syndrome, with association of certain types of sebaceous neoplasms of the skin, with or without keratoacanthomas, with one or more low-grade visceral malignancies in the absence of other predisposing factors.
Etiology:
- adenocarcinomas
- colorectal adenocarcinoma
- breast carcinoma
- lung adenocardinoma
- urogenital neoplasm
- hematologic malignancy [2]
Pathology:
1) sebaceous & skin tumors
a) sebaceous adenomas
b) epitheliomas
c) keratoacanthomas
d) basal & squamous cell carcinomas
2) adenomatous polyps of the colon
3) underlying malignancies
a) carcinoma of the colon (most common)
b) breast cancer
c) hematologic malignancies
Genetics:
- autosomal dominant inheritance
- mutations in MLH1 or MLH2 genes seen
- defects in DNA mismatch repair
Clinical manifestations:
1) may have single or numerous lesions
2) keratoacanthomas of the skin
Special laboratory:
- colonoscopy at the time of diagnosis
General
familial nonpolyposis colon cancer; hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC); Lynch syndrome; cancer family syndrome
sebaceous gland disease
skin disease (dermatologic disorder, dermatopathy, dermatosis)
Properties
ASSOCIATED-NEOPLASM[S]: adenocarcinoma of the colon
sebaceous carcinoma
sebaceous epithelioma
sebaceous adenoma
basal cell carcinoma
keratoacanthoma (KA)
DUODENAL-CARCINOMA
laryngeal carcinoma
BENIGN-GASTROINTESTINAL-TRACT-TUMORS
BENIGN-GENITOURINARY-TRACT-TUMORS
MALIGNANT-GASTROINTESTINAL-TRACT-TUMORS
MALIGNANT-GENITOURINARY-TRACT-TUMORS
breast cancer
Database Correlations
OMIM 158320
References
- Mayo Internal Medicine Board Review, 1998-99, Prakash UBS (ed)
Lippincott-Raven, Philadelphia, 1998, pg 171
- Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 11, 17.
American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 1998
- Singh RS et al,
Site and tumor type predicts DNA mismatch repair status in
cutaneous sebaceous neoplasia.
Am J Surg Pathol 2008 Jun; 32:936
PMID: 18551751