Abstract
From biological, histopathologic, and clinical perspectives, lung cancer is a highly complex neoplasm probably having multiple preneoplastic pathways. The sequence of histopathologic changes in the bronchial mucosa that precedes the development of squamous carcinomas of the lung has been identified. For the other major forms of lung cancer, however, such sequences have been poorly documented. This review summarizes the current knowledge regarding the molecular and histopathologic pathogenesis of lung cancer and discusses the complexity of identifying novel molecular mechanisms involved in the development of the lung premalignant disease, and their relevance to the development of new strategies for early detection and chemoprevention. Although our current knowledge of the molecular pathogenesis of lung cancer is still meager, work over the last decade has taught several important lessons about the molecular pathogenesis of this tumor, including the following: a) Better characterization of the high-risk population is needed. b) There are several histopathologic and molecular pathways associated with the development of the major types of non-small cell lung cancer. c) Although there is a field effect phenomenon for lung preneoplastic lesions, recent data suggest that there are at least two distinct lung airway compartments (central and peripheral) for lung cancer pathogenesis. d) Inflammation may play an important role in lung cancer development and could be an important component of the field effect phenomenon. e) For lung adenocarcinoma, at least two pathways (smoking-related and nonsmoking-related) have been identified. f) Finally, the identification of deregulated molecular signaling pathways in lung cancer preneoplasias may provide a rationale for designing novel strategies for early detection and targeted chemoprevention of lung cancer.
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