What is a Biomarker?

A biomarker (also called a biological marker) is a piece of information about your health. Biomarkers include your blood pressure, your blood type, and cholesterol or blood sugar levels measured in a blood test. The biomarkers of cancer are also known as tumor markers. Biomarkers can tell your medical team important information about you and your cancer.

Why are biomarkers important?

Colorectal cancer biomarkers can provide your medical team vital information about you and your cancer that is used to determine prognosis, guide treatment decisions, monitor treatment response, and look for recurrence after treatment. Biomarkers are also used in drug development to create and test targeted therapies for colorectal cancer.

Biomarkers of hereditary colorectal cancer

The biomarkers that can confirm hereditary colorectal cancer are the DNA mismatch repair genes causing Lynch Syndrome, and the genes causing Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP) and associated syndromes. Lynch Syndrome is caused by mutations in MLH1, MSH2, MSH3, MSH6, EPCAM, or PMS2 genes, while FAP and other polyposis syndromes are caused by mutations in APC, MYH, BMPR1A, and SMAD4.

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