Abstract

Adult age-specific colorectal cancer incidence rates increase exponentially from maturity, reach a maximum, then decline in extreme old age. Armitage and Doll (1) postulated that the exponential increase resulted from “n” mutations occurring throughout adult life in normal “cells at risk” that initiated the growth of a preneoplastic colony in which subsequent “m” mutations promoted one of the preneoplastic “cells at risk” to form a lethal neoplasia. We have reported cytologic evidence that these “cells at risk” are fetal/juvenile organogenic, then preneoplastic metakaryotic stem cells. Metakaryotic cells display stem-like behaviors of both symmetric and asymmetric nuclear divisions and peculiarities such as bell shaped nuclei and amitotic nuclear fission that distinguish them from embryonic, eukaryotic stem cells. Analyses of mutant colony sizes and numbers in adult lung epithelia supported the inferences that the metakaryotic organogenic stem cells are constitutively mutator/hypermutable and that their contributions to cancer initiation are limited to the fetal/juvenile period. We have amended the two-stage model of Armitage and Doll and incorporated these several inferences in a computer program CancerFit v.5.0. We compared the expectations of the amended model to adult (15–104 years) age-specific colon cancer rates for European-American males born 1890–99 and observed remarkable concordance. When estimates of normal colonic fetal/juvenile APC and OAT gene mutation rates (∼2–5 × 10−5 per stem cell doubling) and preneoplastic colonic gene loss rates (∼8 × 10−3) were applied, the model was in accordance only for the values of n = 2 and m = 4 or 5.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe age-specific incidence of colorectal cancer is here reconsidered in terms of stem cell growth and oncomutation in normal stem cells of the fetal/juvenile period (tumor initiation) and thereafter in the preneoplastic stem cells of colonic adenomas (tumor promotion) from which lethal colonic adenocarcinomas arise

  • The age-specific incidence of colorectal cancer is here reconsidered in terms of stem cell growth and oncomutation in normal stem cells of the fetal/juvenile period and thereafter in the preneoplastic stem cells of colonic adenomas from which lethal colonic adenocarcinomas arise

  • SUMMARY These quantitative analyses/ruminations point to an amended qualitative model of human carcinogenesis at least for colorectal carcinogenesis

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Summary

Introduction

The age-specific incidence of colorectal cancer is here reconsidered in terms of stem cell growth and oncomutation in normal stem cells of the fetal/juvenile period (tumor initiation) and thereafter in the preneoplastic stem cells of colonic adenomas (tumor promotion) from which lethal colonic adenocarcinomas arise This reconsideration was prompted by discoveries concerning metakaryotic stem cells in organogenesis and carcinogenesis (2–5) and by evidence that normal organogenic stem cells experience. OVERVIEW OF ORGANOGENESIS AND CARCINOGENESIS The human body arises from a single fertilized egg and in a series of cell divisions creates a body mass of some 244 cells at maturity These cells are not homogeneous but are apportioned among the organs each containing several distinct tissue layers containing in turn one or more histologically recognizable cell types. In the case of the human colon, histologic alterations at multiple foci in www.frontiersin.org

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