Towards a WHO classification of genetic tumour syndromes
Reiner Siebert, William D. Foulkes

TL;DR
The paper discusses the new WHO classification system for genetic tumor syndromes, emphasizing their role in cancer diagnosis and management.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel hierarchical classification system for genetic tumor syndromes in the WHO framework.
Findings
The WHO classification now includes a dedicated volume on genetic tumor syndromes.
The classification system is based on four levels: mechanism, pathway, syndrome, and gene.
It provides standardized names and diagnostic criteria for these syndromes.
Abstract
Almost 70 years ago, the World Health Organization (WHO) decided to propose a “Classification of Tumours”. Since then, a systematic and extensive classification system for tumours has been continuously developed in successive editions and nowadays closely interlinks with coding systems for cancer registries like the International Classification of Diseases for Oncology (ICD-O). Whereas past editions had their focus on histopathological aspects of tumour classification in different organ systems and topologies, to which (somatic) genetic alterations increasingly contributed, the current fifth edition of the WHO Classification for the first time includes a separate “Blue Book” volume on “Genetic Tumour Syndromes”. Along with chapters dedicated to tumour predisposition inferred by constitutional (germline) genetic pathogenic variants in the different organ-specific volumes of the…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic factors in colorectal cancer · Genomic variations and chromosomal abnormalities · Genomics and Rare Diseases
