Literature DB >> 31205456

Inflammation as a Cancer Co-Initiator: New Mechanistic Model Predicts Low/Negligible Risk at Noninflammatory Carcinogen Doses.

Kenneth T Bogen1.   

Abstract

Linear-no-threshold (LNT) risk extrapolation has long been applied to estimate risks posed by low-level environmental carcinogen exposures, based on the 60-year-old multistage somatic mutation/clonal expansion (MSM) cancer theory. Recent evidence supports an alternative theory: Malignant tumors arise most efficiently from a stem cell that incurs requisite mutations and also is activated by inflammation to an epigenetically mediated and maintained state of adaptive hyperplasia (AH). This new inflammation-MSM (ISM) theory posits that inflammation-activated stem cells normally restricted to sites of injury-induced inflammation and tissue repair become uniquely susceptible to efficient carcinogenesis if normal post-inflammation AH termination is blocked by mutation. This theory posits that inflammation generally thus co-initiates cancer and transiently amplifies activated stem cells, implying that MSM theory (eg, the 2-stage stochastic "Moolgavkar, Venzon, Knudson [MVK]" model) is incomplete. Because inflammation dose-response typically is not LNT, the ISM theory predicts this is also true for most (perhaps all) carcinogens. The ISM (but not the MVK) model is shown to be consistent with recent data showing ∼100% carcinoma incidence (but not DNA adducts) in livers of rats exposed to aflatoxin B1 and was eliminated when that dose was co-administered with a highly potent anti-inflammatory agent. Experimental approaches to test ISM theory more robustly are discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biological mechanism; cancer; conditional multistage model; inflammation; low-dose nonlinearity; stem cells

Year:  2019        PMID: 31205456      PMCID: PMC6537503          DOI: 10.1177/1559325819847834

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dose Response        ISSN: 1559-3258            Impact factor:   2.658


  4 in total

1.  Resolution of eicosanoid/cytokine storm prevents carcinogen and inflammation-initiated hepatocellular cancer progression.

Authors:  Anna Fishbein; Weicang Wang; Haixia Yang; Jun Yang; Victoria M Hallisey; Jianjun Deng; Sanne M L Verheul; Sung Hee Hwang; Allison Gartung; Yuxin Wang; Diane R Bielenberg; Sui Huang; Mark W Kieran; Bruce D Hammock; Dipak Panigrahy
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-08-14       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Death of the ALARA Radiation Protection Principle as Used in the Medical Sector.

Authors:  Paul A Oakley; Deed E Harrison
Journal:  Dose Response       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 2.658

Review 3.  Implications of nonlinearity, confounding, and interactions for estimating exposure concentration-response functions in quantitative risk analysis.

Authors:  Louis Anthony Cox
Journal:  Environ Res       Date:  2020-05-19       Impact factor: 6.498

4.  Using the Key Characteristics of Carcinogens to Develop Research on Chemical Mixtures and Cancer.

Authors:  Cynthia V Rider; Cliona M McHale; Thomas F Webster; Leroy Lowe; William H Goodson; Michele A La Merrill; Glenn Rice; Lauren Zeise; Luoping Zhang; Martyn T Smith
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2021-03-30       Impact factor: 9.031

  4 in total

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