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Featured researches published by Waltraut Friedl.


Gut | 2008

Guidelines for the clinical management of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)

Hans F. A. Vasen; G. Moslein; Alejandra del C. Alonso; Stefan Aretz; Inge Bernstein; Lucio Bertario; Ismael Blanco; Steffen Bülow; John Burn; Gabriel Capellá; Chrystelle Colas; Christoph Engel; Ian Frayling; Waltraut Friedl; Frederik J. Hes; Shirley Hodgson; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Pål Møller; T. Myrhoi; Fokko M. Nagengast; Y. Parc; Robin K. S. Phillips; Susan K. Clark; M. P. de Leon; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Julian Roy Sampson; Astrid Stormorken; Sabine Tejpar; Huw Thomas

Background: Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) is a well-described inherited syndrome, which is responsible for <1% of all colorectal cancer (CRC) cases. The syndrome is characterised by the development of hundreds to thousands of adenomas in the colorectum. Almost all patients will develop CRC if they are not identified and treated at an early stage. The syndrome is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait and caused by mutations in the APC gene. Recently, a second gene has been identified that also gives rise to colonic adenomatous polyposis, although the phenotype is less severe than typical FAP. The gene is the MUTYH gene and the inheritance is autosomal recessive. In April 2006 and February 2007, a workshop was organised in Mallorca by European experts on hereditary gastrointestinal cancer aiming to establish guidelines for the clinical management of FAP and to initiate collaborative studies. Thirty-one experts from nine European countries participated in these workshops. Prior to the meeting, various participants examined the most important management issues according to the latest publications. A systematic literature search using Pubmed and reference lists of retrieved articles, and manual searches of relevant articles, was performed. During the workshop, all recommendations were discussed in detail. Because most of the studies that form the basis for the recommendations were descriptive and/or retrospective in nature, many of them were based on expert opinion. The guidelines described herein may be helpful in the appropriate management of FAP families. In order to improve the care of these families further, prospective controlled studies should be undertaken.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2007

Guidelines for the clinical management of Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis cancer)

Hans F. A. Vasen; G. Moslein; Angel Alonso; Inge Bernstein; Lucio Bertario; Ignacio Blanco; John Burn; Gabriel Capellá; Christoph Engel; Ian Frayling; Waltraut Friedl; Frederik J. Hes; Shirley Hodgson; J-P Mecklin; Pål Møller; Fokko M. Nagengast; Y. Parc; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Julian Roy Sampson; Astrid Stormorken; Juul T. Wijnen

Lynch syndrome (hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer) is characterised by the development of colorectal cancer, endometrial cancer and various other cancers, and is caused by a mutation in one of the mismatch repair genes: MLH1, MSH2, MSH6 or PMS2. The discovery of these genes, 15 years ago, has led to the identification of large numbers of affected families. In April 2006, a workshop was organised by a group of European experts in hereditary gastrointestinal cancer (the Mallorca-group), aiming to establish guidelines for the clinical management of Lynch syndrome. 21 experts from nine European countries participated in this workshop. Prior to the meeting, various participants prepared the key management issues of debate according to the latest publications. A systematic literature search using Pubmed and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews reference lists of retrieved articles and manual searches of relevant articles was performed. During the workshop, all recommendations were discussed in detail. Because most of the studies that form the basis for the recommendations were descriptive and/or retrospective in nature, many of them were based on expert opinion. The guidelines described in this manuscript may be helpful for the appropriate management of families with Lynch syndrome. Prospective controlled studies should be undertaken to improve further the care of these families.


Gut | 2010

Peutz–Jeghers syndrome: a systematic review and recommendations for management

A Beggs; A. R. Latchford; Hans F. A. Vasen; G. Moslein; Alejandra del C. Alonso; Stefan Aretz; Lucio Bertario; Ismael Blanco; Steffen Bülow; John Burn; Gabriel Capellá; Chrystelle Colas; Waltraut Friedl; Pål Møller; Frederik J. Hes; Heikki Järvinen; Jukka-Pekka Mecklin; Fokko M. Nagengast; Y. Parc; Robin K. S. Phillips; Warren Hyer; M. Ponz de Leon; Laura Renkonen-Sinisalo; Julian Roy Sampson; Astrid Stormorken; Sabine Tejpar; Huw Thomas; Juul T. Wijnen; Susan K. Clark; S Hodgson

Peutz–Jeghers syndrome (PJS, MIM175200) is an autosomal dominant condition defined by the development of characteristic polyps throughout the gastrointestinal tract and mucocutaneous pigmentation. The majority of patients that meet the clinical diagnostic criteria have a causative mutation in the STK11 gene, which is located at 19p13.3. The cancer risks in this condition are substantial, particularly for breast and gastrointestinal cancer, although ascertainment and publication bias may have led to overestimates in some publications. Current surveillance protocols are controversial and not evidence-based, due to the relative rarity of the condition. Initially, endoscopies are more likely to be done to detect polyps that may be a risk for future intussusception or obstruction rather than cancers, but surveillance for the various cancers for which these patients are susceptible is an important part of their later management. This review assesses the current literature on the clinical features and management of the condition, genotype–phenotype studies, and suggested guidelines for surveillance and management of individuals with PJS. The proposed guidelines contained in this article have been produced as a consensus statement on behalf of a group of European experts who met in Mallorca in 2007 and who have produced guidelines on the clinical management of Lynch syndrome and familial adenomatous polyposis.


Gut | 2001

Can APC mutation analysis contribute to therapeutic decisions in familial adenomatous polyposis? Experience from 680 FAP families

Waltraut Friedl; R Caspari; M Sengteller; S Uhlhaas; C Lamberti; M Jungck; Martina Kadmon; M Wolf; J Fahnenstich; Johannes Gebert; Gabriela Möslein; Elisabeth Mangold; Peter Propping

BACKGROUND AND AIMS In familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), correlations between site of mutation in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene and severity of colonic polyposis or extracolonic manifestations are well known. While mutation analysis is important for predictive diagnosis in persons at risk, its relevance for clinical management of individual patients is open to question. METHODS We examined 680 unrelated FAP families for germline mutations in theAPC gene. Clinical information was obtained from 1256 patients. RESULTS APC mutations were detected in 48% (327/680) of families. Age at diagnosis of FAP based on bowel symptoms and age at diagnosis of colorectal cancer in untreated patients were used as indicators of the severity of the natural course of the disease. A germline mutation was detected in 230 of 404 patients who were diagnosed after onset of bowel symptoms (rectal bleeding, abdominal pain, diarrhoea). When these patients were grouped according to the different sites of mutations, mean values for age at onset of disease differed significantly: patients carryingAPC mutations at codon 1309 showed a disease onset 10 years earlier (mean age 20 years) compared with patients with mutations between codons 168 and 1580 (except codon 1309) (mean age 30 years), whereas patients with mutations at the 5′ end of codon 168 or the 3′ end of codon 1580 were diagnosed at a mean age of 52 years. Within each group of patients however large phenotypic variation was observed, even among patients with identical germline mutations. A higher incidence of desmoids was found in patients with mutations between codons 1445 and 1580 compared with mutations at other sites, while no correlation between site of mutation and presence of duodenal adenomas was observed. CONCLUSIONS As age at manifestation and course of the disease may be rather variable, even in carriers of identical germline mutations, therapeutic decisions should be based on colonoscopic findings in individual patients rather than on the site of mutation. However, in patients with mutations within codons 1445–1580, it may be advisable to postpone elective colectomy because desmoids may arise through surgical intervention.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Muir-Torre Phenotype Has a Frequency of DNA Mismatch-Repair-Gene Mutations Similar to That in Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Cancer Families Defined by the Amsterdam Criteria

Roland Kruse; Arno Rütten; Christof Lamberti; Hamid Reza Hosseiny-Malayeri; Yaping Wang; Corina Ruelfs; Matthias Jungck; Micaela Mathiak; Thomas Ruzicka; Wolfgang Hartschuh; Michele Bisceglia; Waltraut Friedl; Peter Propping

Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) is an autosomal dominant disease defined by the coincidence of at least one sebaceous skin tumor and one internal malignancy. About half of MTS patients are affected by colorectal cancer. In a subgroup of MTS patients the disease has an underlying DNA mismatch-repair (MMR) defect and thus is allelic to hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC). The purpose of this study was to examine to what extent germ-line mutations in DNA MMR genes are the underlying cause of the MTS phenotype. We ascertained 16 MTS patients with sebaceous skin tumors and colorectal cancer, and we examined their skin and visceral tumors for microsatellite instability. All the patients exhibited high genomic instability in at least one tumor. The search for germ-line mutations in the hMSH2 and hMLH1 genes in 13 of the MTS patients revealed truncating mutations in 9 (69%): eight mutations in the hMSH2 gene and one in the hMLH1 gene. This is the first systematic search for germ-line mutations in patients ascertained on the basis of sebaceous skin tumors. Our results indicate that (1) MTS patients exhibit significantly more mutations in the hMSH2 gene than in the hMLH1 gene; and (2) the subpopulation of MTS patients who are also affected by colorectal cancer, irrespective of family history and age at onset of tumors, may have a likelihood for an underlying DNA MMR defect similar to that for patients with a family history fulfilling the strict clinical criteria for HNPCC.


International Journal of Cancer | 2006

MUTYH‐associated polyposis: 70 of 71 patients with biallelic mutations present with an attenuated or atypical phenotype

Stefan Aretz; Siegfried Uhlhaas; Heike Goergens; Kirsten Siberg; Matthias Vogel; Constanze Pagenstecher; Elisabeth Mangold; Reiner Caspari; Peter Propping; Waltraut Friedl

To determine the frequency, mutation spectrum and phenotype of the recently described autosomal recessive MUTYH‐associated polyposis (MAP), we performed a systematic search for MUTYH (MYH) mutations by sequencing the complete coding region of the gene in 329 unselected APC mutation‐negative index patients with the clinical diagnosis of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) or attenuated FAP (AFAP). Biallelic germline mutations in MUTYH were identified in 55 of the 329 unselected patients (17%) and in another 9 selected index cases. About one‐fifth (20%) of the 64 unrelated MAP patients harboured none of the 2 hot‐spot missense mutations Y165C and/or G382D. Including 7 affected relatives, almost all MAP patients presented with either an attenuated (80%) or with an atypical phenotype (18%). Fifty percentage of the MAP patients had colorectal cancer at diagnosis. Duodenal polyposis was found in 18%, thyroid and stomach cancer in 1 case, other extraintestinal manifestations associated with FAP were not observed. In 8 families, vertical segregation was suspected; in 2 of these families, biallelic mutations were identified in 2 generations. Monoallelic changes with predicted functional relevance were found in 0.9% of the 329 patients, which is in accordance with the carrier frequency in the general population. In conclusion, biallelic MUTYH mutations are the underlying genetic basis in a substantial fraction of patients with adenomatous polyposis. The phenotype of MAP is best characterised as attenuated or atypical, respectively. Colorectal surveillance starting at about 18 years of age is recommended for biallelic mutation carriers and siblings of MAP patients, who refuse predictive testing.


Human Genetics | 1996

Attenuated familial adenomatous polyposis due to a mutation in the 3′ part of the APC gene. A clue for understanding the function of the APC protein

Waltraut Friedl; Stephanie Meuschel; Reiner Caspari; Christof Lamberti; Stefan Krieger; Marlies Sengteller; Peter Propping

The identification of germline mutations in a large number of clinically well-characterised patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) has allowed the unravelling of several genotype-phenotype relationships that can now be interpreted in the light of the structure and functional domains of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein. An attenuated phenotype has been found to be associated with mutations at the 5′ end of the gene, while a severe clinical expression was found in patients with the most common mutation at codon 1309. So far, only few mutations in the 3′ half of the gene have been published. We report on two families with a rather mild phenotype due to a frameshift mutation at codon 1597. These families may represent a clue for defining a 5′ border for the occurrence of a second region of attenuated FAP that is localised in the 3′ part of the APC gene. We propose a model to explain the relationship between the severity of the disease and the size of the mutant APC protein.


International Journal of Cancer | 2001

Somatic mutations of WNT/wingless signaling pathway components in primitive neuroectodermal tumors

Arend Koch; Anke Waha; Jörg C. Tonn; Nils Sörensen; Frank Berthold; Marietta Wolter; J. Reifenberger; Wolfgang Hartmann; Waltraut Friedl; Guido Reifenberger; Otmar D. Wiestler; Torsten Pietsch

Primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNETs) represent the most frequent malignant brain tumors in childhood. The majority of these neoplasms occur in the cerebellum and are classified as medulloblastomas (MB). Most PNETs develop sporadically; however, their incidence is highly elevated in patients carrying germline APC gene mutations. The APC gene encodes a central component of the WNT/wingless developmental signaling pathway. It regulates the levels of cytoplasmic β‐catenin protein that plays a central role in neural development and cell proliferation. We analyzed 87 sporadic PNETs and 10 PNET cell lines for mutations of the APC gene and β‐catenin (CTNNB1) gene using single strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) and sequencing analysis. We examined the mutation cluster region of APC (codons 1255–1641) for germline variants and somatic mutations. The medulloblastoma cell line MHH‐MED‐2 carried a Glu1317Gln missense germline variant and a sporadic MB sample showed a somatic Pro1319Leu substitution. Mutational analysis of exon 3 of CTNNB1 uncovered 4 PNETs (4.8%) with somatic missense mutations. These mutations caused amino acid substitutions in 3 of 80 medulloblastomas (Ser33Phe, Ser33Cys and Ser37Cys) and 1 of 4 supratentorial PNETs (Gly34Val). All mutations affected GSK‐3β phosphorylation sites of the degradation targeting box of β‐catenin and resulted in nuclear β‐catenin protein accumulation. Deletions of CTNNB1 were not detected by PCR amplification with primers spanning exons 1–5. Our data indicate that inappropriate activation of the WNT/wingless signaling pathway by mutations of its components may contribute to the pathogenesis of a subset of PNETs.


Human Genetics | 2002

Juvenile polyposis: massive gastric polyposis is more common in MADH4 mutation carriers than in BMPR1A mutation carriers

Waltraut Friedl; Siegfried Uhlhaas; Karsten Schulmann; Manfred Stolte; Steffan Loff; Walter Back; Elisabeth Mangold; Martin Stern; Hanns-Peter Knaebel; Christian Sutter; Ruthild G. Weber; Steffen Pistorius; Bettina Burger; Peter Propping

Abstract. Juvenile polyposis syndrome (JPS) is an autosomal dominant predisposition to multiple juvenile polyps in the gastrointestinal tract. Germline mutations in the MADH4 or BMPR1A genes have been found to be causative of the disease in a subset of JPS patients. So far, no genotype-phenotype correlation has been reported. We examined 29 patients with the clinical diagnosis of JPS for germline mutations in the MADH4 or BMPR1A genes and identified MADH4 mutations in seven (24%) and BMPR1A mutations in five patients (17%). A remarkable prevalence of massive gastric polyposis was observed in patients with MADH4 mutations when compared with patients with BMPR1A mutations or without identified mutations. This is the first genotype-phenotype correlation observed in JPS.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2002

Loss of DNA mismatch repair proteins in skin tumors from patients with Muir-Torre syndrome and MSH2 or MLH1 germline mutations: establishment of immunohistochemical analysis as a screening test.

Micaela Mathiak; Arno Rütten; Elisabeth Mangold; Hans-Peter Fischer; Thomas Ruzicka; Waltraut Friedl; Peter Propping; Roland Kruse

Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) is a rare autosomal-dominant disorder characterized by the predisposition to both sebaceous skin tumors (or multiple keratoacanthomas) and internal malignancies. A subtype of MTS is allelic to hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer and is caused by germline mutations in the DNA mismatch repair genes MSH2 or MLH1. In these cases both internal and skin tumors show characteristic microsatellite instability (MSI). The aim of the present study was to determine whether immunohistochemical examination of MSH2 or MLH1 protein expression in MTS-associated skin tumors can be used as a diagnostic screening tool to identify patients with germline mutations in MSH2 or MLH1. In the present study 28 skin lesions from 17 patients (20 sebaceous gland tumors, 4 sebaceous hyperplasias, 3 keratoacanthomas, and 1 squamous cell carcinoma) were tested immunohistochemically with antibodies against MSH2 and MLH1. Eighteen of these tumors were from eight patients with known MSH2 germline mutations, two tumors were from a patient with a germline mutation in MLH1, and eight microsatellite stable sporadic skin tumors served as controls. One sample had to be excluded because of a lack of immunoreactivity. All eight microsatellite stable tumors expressed both DNA repair proteins. In 15 of the tumors from MSH2 germline mutation carriers, loss of MSH2 expression was observed, one tumor showed reduced MSH2 expression, and one tumor displayed positive immunoreactivity to MSH2. Both tumors of the MLH1 germline mutation carrier showed loss of the MLH1 protein. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate that immunohistochemical testing of MTS-related skin tumors is a reliable screening method with high predictive value for the diagnosis of the DNA mismatch repair-deficient MTS.

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Roland Kruse

University of Düsseldorf

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