A team led by Johns Hopkins researchers found that a hereditary colon cancer syndrome, familial adenomatous polyposis, is associated with abnormally dense blood vessel growth in the skin lining the mouth.
People who have even one copy of the mutant gene that causes FAP develop hundreds of precancerous colorectal polyps in their teens and most have their colons removed after diagnosis to avoid a near-100 percent risk of colon cancer by middle age.
Read the Familial Cancer report on colon cancer.
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Nearly One-Third of Target Population Unscreened for Colon Cancer
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Office Desk Jobs Double Colon Cancer Risk
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