| Screening for Familial Colorectal
Cancer: the Need for Continuing Education. A Case Report
Adina Neagoe, Olimpia Chira,
Monica Acalovschi, Dana Dumitra
3rd Medical Clinic, University
of Medicine and Pharmacy, Cluj-Napoca
Abstract
A 37 year old female patient
was diagnosed with sigmoid colon cancer in our clinic five years
ago (January 1998). The family history revealed three deaths due
to colorectal cancer ( maternal grandmother, mother’s sister
and patient’s sister), and the patient’s mother had
been diagnosed with adenomatous polyps (endoscopically removed).
Histo-pathological diagnosis was moderate / poorly differentiated
adenocarcinoma. Resection of sigmoid colon was performed and adjuvant
chemotherapy was carried out, with uneventful evolution. The patient
was annually followed-up (colonoscopy, abdominal ultrasound, laboratory
tests). The last admission was in January 2003. No recurrence or
metastases were found. The patient’s mother, who was admitted
at the same time, had been diagnosed with urinary bladder tumor.
Subjects with a personal or family history of colorectal cancer,
should routinely have a colonoscopy beginning from age 40 or earlier.
It is important for such patients to be followed-up closely not
only for recurrence or metastases, but also for detection and treatment
of a second primary cancer at an early stage.
Key words
Familial colorectal cancer –
screening – education
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