Healthy lifestyle crucial for cancer prevention

New York: Offering a new explanation for what drives cancer, recent research has shown that cells with cancerous mutations can suddenly find themselves most fit, allowing their population to expand when the tissue ecosystem changes due to ageing, smoking, or other stressors. Arguing against the commonly held “accumulation of mutations” model of cancer, the study […]

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New York: Offering a new explanation for what drives cancer, recent research has shown that cells with cancerous mutations can suddenly find themselves most fit, allowing their population to expand when the tissue ecosystem changes due to ageing, smoking, or other stressors.

Arguing against the commonly held "accumulation of mutations" model of cancer, the study favours a model that depends on evolutionary pressures acting on populations of cells. It, therefore, contends that the ecosystem of a healthy tissue landscape lets healthy cells outcompete ones with cancerous mutations.