Brown T, Dawson A A, McDonald I A, Bullock I, Watt J L
Cancer Genet Cytogenet. 1985 May;17(1):35-42. doi: 10.1016/0165-4608(85)90099-8.
Sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) and chromosome damage were scored in lymphocyte cultures from 11 patients with two or more primary cancers and were compared with normal controls. None of the patients had a constitutional chromosome anomaly, but six showed evidence of chromosome instability, which could not be accounted for by treatment, expressed either as elevated SCE frequency or increased nonspecific chromosome damage and chromosome loss. Chromosome damage included major rearrangements as well as deletions and gaps. The possibility of common mechanisms in chromosome instability leading to susceptibility to a heterogeneous group of primary cancers is discussed.