Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis, or FAP, accounts for roughly 1 percent of hereditary colorectal cancer and carries an extremely high lifetime risk of colon cancer and elevated risks for other exceedingly rare cancers. It is an autosomal dominant condition caused by germline mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. By the age of fifty, nearly 99 percent of untreated FAP patients will have developed cancer.

This is the dark shadow that has lingered over one family since at least 1911, when a matriarch was first seen at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for symptoms that would become commonplace in her descendants. Three of her five children died in their thirties with what they’d come to call “summer’s complaint” (a variant of the general diagnosis “summer complaint” often given to infants and children facing severe intestinal/gastric maladies). Her granddaughter, genetically programmed by a defect on her 5th chromosome also developed colon cancer, which would ultimately take her life. Five of her eight great-grandchildren carried the APC mutation, three of whom were diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancers at an average age of forty-nine. Two of her great-great-grandchildren who carried the gene mutation died of associated brain and liver cancers, one at thirty-one, the other just shy of his third birthday.

This is that family's sometimes tragic story. As told by a daughter, aunt, and sister who was spared the mutation but has been surrounded by its relentless destruction her entire life, Summer’s Complaint is at once a testament to the courage of those one family has lost and a journey toward understanding hereditary predispositions to disease and how best to combat them.

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Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis, or FAP, accounts for roughly 1 percent of hereditary colorectal cancer and carries an extremely high lifetime risk of colon cancer and elevated risks for other exceedingly rare cancers. It is an autosomal dominant condition caused by germline mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. By the age of fifty, nearly 99 percent of untreated FAP patients will have developed cancer.

This is the dark shadow that has lingered over one family since at least 1911, when a matriarch was first seen at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for symptoms that would become commonplace in her descendants. Three of her five children died in their thirties with what they’d come to call “summer’s complaint” (a variant of the general diagnosis “summer complaint” often given to infants and children facing severe intestinal/gastric maladies). Her granddaughter, genetically programmed by a defect on her 5th chromosome also developed colon cancer, which would ultimately take her life. Five of her eight great-grandchildren carried the APC mutation, three of whom were diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancers at an average age of forty-nine. Two of her great-great-grandchildren who carried the gene mutation died of associated brain and liver cancers, one at thirty-one, the other just shy of his third birthday.

This is that family's sometimes tragic story. As told by a daughter, aunt, and sister who was spared the mutation but has been surrounded by its relentless destruction her entire life, Summer’s Complaint is at once a testament to the courage of those one family has lost and a journey toward understanding hereditary predispositions to disease and how best to combat them.

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Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

by Laura Kieger
Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

Summer's Complaint: My family's courageous, century-long struggle with a rare genetic cancer syndrome

by Laura Kieger

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Overview

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis, or FAP, accounts for roughly 1 percent of hereditary colorectal cancer and carries an extremely high lifetime risk of colon cancer and elevated risks for other exceedingly rare cancers. It is an autosomal dominant condition caused by germline mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene. By the age of fifty, nearly 99 percent of untreated FAP patients will have developed cancer.

This is the dark shadow that has lingered over one family since at least 1911, when a matriarch was first seen at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota for symptoms that would become commonplace in her descendants. Three of her five children died in their thirties with what they’d come to call “summer’s complaint” (a variant of the general diagnosis “summer complaint” often given to infants and children facing severe intestinal/gastric maladies). Her granddaughter, genetically programmed by a defect on her 5th chromosome also developed colon cancer, which would ultimately take her life. Five of her eight great-grandchildren carried the APC mutation, three of whom were diagnosed with gastrointestinal cancers at an average age of forty-nine. Two of her great-great-grandchildren who carried the gene mutation died of associated brain and liver cancers, one at thirty-one, the other just shy of his third birthday.

This is that family's sometimes tragic story. As told by a daughter, aunt, and sister who was spared the mutation but has been surrounded by its relentless destruction her entire life, Summer’s Complaint is at once a testament to the courage of those one family has lost and a journey toward understanding hereditary predispositions to disease and how best to combat them.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780998429328
Publisher: Laura Kieger
Publication date: 12/06/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 356
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Laura Kieger has had a passion for writing since the first grade when she crayoned her debut short story about Penley, a pudgy penguin determined to fly. Her roles as an entrepreneur, parent, health advocate, and human resources professional in the medical field have all contributed to her desire to connect with others through the written word. As a native Minnesotan and alumnus of the University of Minnesota, Laura is a huge Golden Gophers fan. She and her husband Bill raised their three kids, Alexander, Kelsey, and Adele in the Twin Cities enjoying all the state has to offer-including it's character-building winters. Summer's Complaint is Laura's first book. Visit her website at www.laurakieger.com.
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