An inherited condition (mismatch-repair gene mutations) increasing risk of colorectal, endometrial, and other cancers.
Why Do I Need Management?
- Up to 80% lifetime colorectal cancer risk without surveillance.
- Elevated risk of endometrial and ovarian cancers.
How Should I Prepare?
- Genetic counseling and testing for MSH2, MLH1, MSH6, PMS2 mutations.
- Baseline colonoscopy at age 20–25 or 2–5 years before the youngest family case.
What Happens During Management?
- Surveillance: Colonoscopy every 1–2 years.
- Prophylaxis: Consider colectomy after cancer or high-grade dysplasia; hysterectomy for women after childbearing.
What Can I Expect Afterwards?
- Continued regular surveillance for associated cancers (gastric, urinary tract).
Risks & Possible Complications
- Surgical risks: bleeding, infection, anastomotic leak (<5%).
- Psychosocial impact of genetic diagnosis.
Follow-Up
- Endometrial/ovarian cancer screening in women starting at age 30–35.
- Annual urinary tract evaluation.

