Cancer syndromeAPCOMIM 175100
Gardner syndrome
FAP-Gardner variant ยท familial adenomatous polyposis with extracolonic features
Gardner syndrome is a phenotypic variant of familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). It combines colorectal adenomatous polyposis with extracolonic features โ epidermoid cysts, osteomas, desmoid tumours, dental abnormalities and congenital hypertrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium (CHRPE). Untreated FAP carries near-100% lifetime colorectal cancer risk. The cutaneous and skeletal features may pre-date colonic polyposis, giving dermatologists and oncoplastic surgeons a sentinel role.
CurrentLast reviewed 16 May 2026
Genetics
- Autosomal dominant. APC gene tumour-suppressor on chromosome 5q22.
- Allelic with classic FAP, attenuated FAP and Turcot syndrome (CNS) โ phenotype depends on mutation position.
- ~25% are de novo mutations. Penetrance for colorectal polyposis is near complete.
Cutaneous and soft-tissue features
- Epidermoid cysts โ multiple, often on the face / scalp / extremities; may precede polyposis by years; can occur in childhood (uncommon in unaffected paediatric population).
- Pilomatricomas โ increased frequency.
- Desmoid tumours โ locally aggressive (CTNNB1 / APC-driven) fibromatosis; often abdominal post-laparotomy; major cause of morbidity and mortality after colectomy.
- Lipomas, fibromas, neurofibromas โ variable.
Extracutaneous features
- Colorectal adenomatous polyposis โ hundreds to thousands of adenomas by adolescence; CRC inevitable without prophylactic colectomy (lifetime risk >90%).
- Osteomas โ skull / mandible / long bones; often the first radiographic sign.
- Dental โ supernumerary / unerupted teeth, odontomas.
- CHRPE โ congenital hypertrophy of retinal pigment epithelium; multiple bilateral lesions support diagnosis.
- Other cancers โ papillary thyroid (~2-12%), hepatoblastoma (paediatric), pancreatic, biliary, gastric, duodenal / ampullary, brain (medulloblastoma โ Turcot).
Diagnosis and surveillance
- Refer for germline APC testing when โฅ1 of: multiple epidermoid cysts in a child / adolescent; childhood-onset desmoid; multiple jaw osteomas; CHRPE multiplicity; first-degree relative with FAP.
- Lower-GI surveillance typically begins at 10-15 years (per NHS regional protocol); flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy annually.
- Upper-GI surveillance (duodenal Spigelman) from age 25.
- Annual thyroid USS for papillary thyroid cancer screening.
- Prophylactic colectomy (subtotal vs proctocolectomy) usually in late teens / early twenties.
Practical points for skin / plastic surgery
- Multiple childhood epidermoid cysts should prompt full family / dental / ophthalmology review.
- Abdominal-wall mass after surgery โ consider desmoid, not recurrence; imaging plus ฮฒ-catenin / CTNNB1 staining.
- Counsel against unnecessary surgical trauma in known FAP โ desmoid risk is provoked by surgery.
- Multidisciplinary management via clinical genetics + colorectal MDT + sarcoma MDT for desmoids.
References
- Kennedy RD et al. The natural history of familial adenomatous polyposis syndrome: a 24-year review of a single centre experience in screening, diagnosis and management. J Pediatr Surg. 2014;49:82-86.
- Half E et al. Familial adenomatous polyposis. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2009;4:22.
- Galiatsatos P, Foulkes WD. Familial adenomatous polyposis. Am J Gastroenterol. 2006;101:385-398.
- Monahan KJ et al. Guidelines for the management of hereditary colorectal cancer from the British Society of Gastroenterology (BSG)/ACPGBI/UKCGG. Gut. 2020;69:411-444.
- NICE NG151. Colorectal cancer. London: NICE; 2020 (last updated 15 December 2021).
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