# Successful Surveillance Using Endometrial Cytology in a Woman With Lynch Syndrome

**Authors:** Atsushi Murakami, Hidetaka Nomura, Yuko Sugiyama, Hiroyuki Kanao

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.66250 · 2024-08-06

## TL;DR

Endometrial cytology successfully detected early-stage endometrial cancer in a woman with Lynch syndrome, avoiding the need for biopsy.

## Contribution

Demonstrates endometrial cytology as an effective alternative to biopsy for Lynch syndrome surveillance.

## Key findings

- Endometrial cytology detected stage IA endometrial cancer in a Lynch syndrome patient.
- The patient remained cancer-free for five years after surgery without adjuvant therapy.
- Cytology showed high accuracy comparable to biopsy in identifying endometrial malignancy.

## Abstract

Lynch syndrome (LS) results from pathogenic variants in mismatch repair genes and is the most common hereditary cancer syndrome. Some guidelines or studies recommend restricting screening according to endometrial cancer (EC) using endometrial biopsy. The pooled sensitivity and specificity of endometrial cytology for detecting endometrial atypical hyperplasia or cancer have been reported to be as high as the pooled sensitivity and specificity of endometrial biopsy. We conduct transvaginal ultrasound and endometrial cytology in women with LS every six months as surveillance for gynecological malignancy. Through this surveillance program, we can detect early-stage EC in women with LS. Here, we report the case of a patient with stage IA EC detected by endometrial cytology and treated completely. The patient was a 47-year-old woman under surveillance for gynecological malignancy. She was diagnosed as having LS with a germline pathogenic variant in MSH6 after surgery for rectal cancer. Thereafter, gynecological surveillance was started. She had regular menstruation and never experienced atypical genital bleeding. However, her cytopathological findings indicated grade 1 endometrial carcinoma. Endometrial biopsy was performed and endometrial carcinoma was confirmed pathologically. A laparoscopic modified radical hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy was performed. The resected specimen was reviewed pathologically, and the tumor was finally diagnosed as grade 1 endometrioid carcinoma confined to the endometrium without lymphovascular space invasion. She has remained asymptomatic and free of cancer for five years without any adjuvant therapy. We achieved successful surveillance using endometrial cytology. Endometrial cytology could replace endometrial biopsy as a screening tool for EC.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** MSH6 (mutS homolog 6) [NCBI Gene 2956]
- **Diseases:** Lynch syndrome (MONDO:0005835), endometrial cancer (MONDO:0002447), rectal cancer (MONDO:0006519)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** MSH6 (mutS homolog 6) [NCBI Gene 2956] {aka GTBP, GTMBP, HNPCC5, HSAP, LYNCH5, MMRCS3}
- **Diseases:** EC (MESH:D016889), cancer (MESH:D009369), gynecological malignancy (MESH:D005833), endometrial atypical hyperplasia or cancer (MESH:D004714), LS (MESH:D003123), genital bleeding (MESH:D006470), endometrioid carcinoma (MESH:D018269), rectal cancer (MESH:D012004), hereditary cancer syndrome (MESH:D009386)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11375435/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11375435