%0 Journal Article %T Clinicopathological features of a kindred with SCG5-GREM1-associated hereditary mixed polyposis syndrome. %A Plesec T %A Brown K %A Allen C %A A Burke C %A Church J %A Kalady M %A LaGuardia L %A O'Malley M %A Heald B %J Hum Pathol %V 60 %N 0 %D 02 2017 %M 27984123 %F 3.526 %R 10.1016/j.humpath.2016.10.002 %X Since first characterized in 1997, patients with hereditary mixed polyposis syndrome (HMPS) have been difficult to identify because of lack of well-established diagnostic criteria. Recently, HMPS was found to be caused by a duplication on chromosome 15 spanning the 3' end of the SCG5 gene and a region upstream of the GREM1 locus. Clinical testing for the duplication is available; however, the clinical characteristics of hereditary mixed polyposis to support testing are ill defined. The clinicopathological findings of 10 HMPS patients with confirmed germline SCG5-GREM1 duplication were reviewed. Mean age at presentation was 33.3 years. Fifty-one colonoscopies yielded 207 polyp specimens, all of which were reexamined. Adenomas (n = 80) and a fairly unique polyp composed of a mixture of hyperplastic polyp and inflammatory polyp-type changes (n = 74) were the most common findings; however, other polyps, including hyperplastic (n = 28), mixed inflammatory polyp/adenoma (n = 8), inflammatory polyp (n = 7), prolapse-type polyp (n = 6), and lymphoid aggregates (n = 4), were encountered. None of the patients developed colorectal malignancy during surveillance, demonstrated extracolonic manifestations, or underwent colectomy on follow-up (mean, 26.2 years). SCG5-GREM1 duplication-associated polyposis is characterized by a few polyps per endoscopy with a mixture of phenotypes, most commonly adenoma and nondysplastic mixed hyperplastic/inflammatory polyps. Nine of 10 patients had at least 1 mixed hyperplastic-inflammatory polyp, which is the characteristic lesion of SCG5-GREM1 duplication-associated HMPS.