The majority of cancers are the result of bad luck rather than unhealthy lifestyles or inherited genetic faults, scientists have discovered.
For years health experts have
warned that tumours are driven by a bad diet, lack of exercise, or gene errors
passed down from parents.
The government even set up its
‘100,000 Genomes Project’ to try and find the genetic causes of many rare
diseases and cancers.
But now a study has shown that
most cancers are primarily caused by bad luck rather than poor lifestyle
choices or defective DNA.
Researchers found that two
thirds of cancers are driven by random mistakes in cell division which are
completely outside of our control.
They found that the more cells
need to divide to stay healthy, the more likely cancer is to develop.
It is the first time that
scientists have been able to explain why some cancers are more common than
others.
It explains why, for example,
colon cancer is more prevalent than cancer of the small intestine, because
cells in the colon divide twice as fast as those in the upper bowel.
Of 31 cancers studied by
scientists at John Hopkins University School of Medicine in the US, just nine were
found to be linked to lifestyle or genetic faults. The remaining 22 were mainly
just the result of ‘bad luck,’ with DNA and behaviour only having a small
impact.
The scientists claim that
because it is impossible to prevent most types of cancer through behavioural
changes or genetic screening, more should be done to speed up diagnosis so they
can be spotted as early as possible.
"If two-thirds of cancer
incidence across tissues is explained by random DNA mutations that occur when
stem cells divide, then changing our lifestyle and habits will be a huge help
in preventing certain cancers, but may not be as effective for a variety of
others,” said Dr Cristian Tomasetti.
"We should focus more
resources on finding ways to detect such cancers at early, curable
stages."
Cell division is important to
renew the body and repair damage. But sometimes one chemical letter in DNA is
incorrectly swapped for another during the replication process which drives the
production of cancerous cells.
Scientists looked at the number
of cell divisions of 31 types of bodily tissue and compared them with the
overall incidence of cancer in the population of America.
They found that the more cell
mutations occurred, the higher the rate of cancer, suggesting that it was the
number of random errors in replication that was driving tumours rather than
outside environmental forces.
For example the cells of the
pancreas regenerate far more quickly than those of the pelvis, which is why
pancreatic cancer is far more common than pelvic cancer.
However some cancers such as
lung and skin cancer had higher rates than their mutations should predict,
suggesting that genetics or lifestyle factors had increased the risk.
Lead researcher Professor Bert
Vogelstein, said: "Cancer-free longevity in people exposed to
cancer-causing agents, such as tobacco, is often attributed to their 'good
genes,' but the truth is that most of them simply had good luck.
“Our study shows, in general,
that a change in the number of stem cell divisions in a tissue type is highly
correlated with a change in the incidence of cancer in that same tissue.
"We found that the types of
cancer that had higher risk than predicted by the number of stem cell divisions
were precisely the ones you'd expect, including lung cancer, which is linked to
smoking; skin cancer, linked to sun exposure; and forms of cancers associated
with hereditary syndromes."
However health experts said the
study demonstrates how important it is to help lower the risk of certain
cancers by eating healthily, exercising and giving up smoking.
“While some genetic mistakes are
due to bad luck, we know that our cancer risk depends on a combination of our
genes, our environment and other aspects of our lives, many of which we can
control,” said Dr Emma Smith, senior science information officer at Cancer
Research UK.
“We estimate that more than four
in 10 cancers could be prevented by lifestyle changes, like not smoking,
keeping a healthy weight, eating a healthy diet and cutting back on alcohol.
“Making these changes is not a
guarantee against cancer, but it stacks the odds in our favour.
“It's vital that we continue
making progress to detect cancer earlier and improve treatments.”
Prof Hans Clevers, a stem cell
and cancer biologist at the Hubrecht Institute in Utrecht, the Netherlands,
said the research would help cancer patients to realise that the disease was
not their fault.
“The average cancer patient is
just unlucky,” said Prof Clevers
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