Abstract
Increased in vitro tetraploidy occurred in skin cultures derived from all affected patients and some family members at risk studied in families with heritable colon cancer syndromes (15 of 16 Gardner syndrome families, three Oldfield syndrome families, and four families with heritable colon cancer syndrome without polyposis coli) but was not present in all (one Gardner syndrome family, 16 of 19 familial polyposis coli families, and two Turcot syndrome families). Seven of 97 controls, family members by marriage, showed increased in vitro tetraploidy. None of these seven had a family history of colonic cancer but four had a family history of other solid tumors. Such in vitro studies illustrated that the occurrence of in vitro tetraploidy should be determined in families rather than individuals in order to determine whether all patients clinically affected show increased in vitro tetraploidy and vertical transmission that can be documented.