PDPaula Dobosz
Papers(1)
Hereditary Endometria…
Collaborators(10)
Paweł ZielińskiRafał AłtynAndrzej KlukBartosz J. PłachnoEwa DwojakHanna GryczkaHanna MarkiewiczJan K. ŚlężakJoanna CzerniakMałgorzata Braszka
Institutions(4)
Poznan University Of …Uniwersytet Jagielloń…Medical University Of…University College Lo…

Papers

Hereditary Endometrial Cancer: Lynch Syndrome, Mismatch Repair Deficiency, and Emerging Genetic Predispositions—A Comprehensive Review with Clinical and Laboratory Guidelines

Endometrial cancer is the most common gynaecologic malignancy in high-income countries, with a rising incidence largely driven by reproductive factors, obesity, and prolonged exposure to unopposed oestrogens. Although most cases are sporadic, approximately 2–5% are associated with hereditary cancer syndromes, of which Lynch syndrome represents the most important contributor. Lynch syndrome results from germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes and is associated with a substantially increased lifetime risk of endometrial cancer, reaching up to 71% in carriers of MutS homologue 6 (MSH6) mutations. Hereditary cancer predisposition typically follows an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern and may be suspected based on clinical warning signs such as early disease onset, multiple primary malignancies, a strong family history, or the presence of microsatellite instability in tumour tissue. In addition to Lynch syndrome, rarer genetic conditions—including Cowden syndrome (PTEN), Li–Fraumeni syndrome (TP53), polymerase proofreading–associated polyposis (POLE/POLD1), and hereditary breast and ovarian cancer syndromes (BRCA1/2)—also contribute to hereditary endometrial cancer risk. Recognition of these genetic backgrounds is essential for accurate diagnosis, personalised surveillance, and the implementation of targeted preventive and therapeutic strategies. Despite major advances in molecular diagnostics, hereditary endometrial cancer remains frequently underdiagnosed, leading to missed opportunities for cancer prevention among affected individuals and their families. This comprehensive review summarises current evidence on hereditary predispositions to endometrial cancer, with a particular emphasis on Lynch syndrome, and discusses underlying genetic mechanisms, inheritance patterns, diagnostic strategies, and clinical implications for screening, genetic counselling, and treatment optimisation.

60Works
1Papers
10Collaborators
Genetic Predisposition to DiseaseLung NeoplasmsDrug Resistance, NeoplasmTumor MicroenvironmentBiomarkers, TumorEndometritis

Positions

Researcher

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

2023–

Researcher

Uniwersytet Warszawski Instytut Genetyki i Biotechnologii

2021–

Chief of the Dept.

Central Clinical Hospital of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Administration in Warsaw · Genetics and Genomics Department

2019–

Chief of Scientific Development

MNM Diagnostics · Science Dept.

2016–

post-doc

Tel Aviv University Sackler Faculty of Medicine · Oncology Department

Education

2017

M.St. in Genomic Medicine

University of Cambridge · Medical Genetics

2015

PhD in physical culture sciences (sport psychology and medicine; (Title of dissertation: “Personality and sexuality of Sportspeople Practicing Generically Male and Female Disciplines, on the Example of Dancers and Karate Experts.”)

University of Physical Education

2015

M.Sc. in Psychology, spec. clinical psychology

University of Finance and Management · Department of Psychology

2011

Postgraduate Studies in Clinical Sexology, spec. genetic abnormalities

Medcial University of Warsaw

2010

PhD studies in molecular genetics

Medical Centre of Postgraduate Studies

2008

M.Sc. in Biology - molecular genetics

Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie · Biology and Earth Sciences

Keywords
cancer geneticscancer genomicsimmunotherapycancer