Title: Chemicals, risk and cancer
1Chemicals, risk and cancer
- David R. Bell
- 13210
- david.bell_at_nottingham.ac.uk
Introduction to the cellular and molecular
biology of cancer Ed Franks Teich
2Do chemicals cause cancer ?
- Epidemiology
- The study of illness in populations
- Correlate with influences on the population, eg
diet, work, geography - 1775
- The surgeon, Percival Potts, noted that coal
sweeps had a high incidence of cancer, scrotal
cancer. He hypothesised that the cancer was due
to their intimate and prolonged exposure to coal
dust.
3Epidemiological methods
- Case studies
- Essentially anecdotal, eg John was treated with
X and developed cancer - Poor evidence
- the sample group is not defined, and may be
biased - More rigorous approach needed for agents which
cause a subtle effect -
4Comparison with controls
- Untreated people develop disease and die
- Must control by comparison with an appropriate
group - Enormous variation within population
- Social class
- Sex
- Age
- Other factors, e.g. smoking
5Epidemiology methods 2
- Retrospective studies
- Study a group of people who have a particular
cancer - Retrospectively match with people who are matched
for e.g. age, sex, smoking history, etc - Sample bias is inherent in the study
6Epidemiology methods 3
- Prospective studies
- Set out what you are going to do before you do
it, and what you are looking for - Randomise subjects to treated or control groups
- Identify and match control treated groups
before onset of illness - Least sample bias
- Highly labour intensive
7Statistics Epidemiology
- Statistical design is paramount in epidemiology
- Sample size must be large (ngtgt1)
- If you compare control vs. treated, and look at
20 organs, then at least one will be different at
Plt0.05 - Set out your hypothesis before you start
- Salami slicing of treated groups to get a
positive result
8Causation is not correlation
- Many epidemiological approaches simply measure
the association of a variable with a particular
endpoint - This is an uncontrolled experiment, where there
are many other variables - Low socio-economic status is associated with
lung, liver cancer, bad health - Association does not prove causation
9Is cancer increasing ?
10Cancer rates
- The total incidence of cancer is not always
useful - i.e. number of deaths from cancer
- Consider a population of rats 50 die from heart
failure, and 50 from cancer. If they are given a
drug which cures heart failure, what will be the
outcome ? - Incidence rates are more informative, eg
age-specific incidence rates - Sensitive to improvements in cancer diagnosis
11Factors affecting cancer
- Sex
- Lung cancer
- Male 2-5 1 Female
- Breast cancer
- Male 0.01 1 Female
- Racial origin
- White skin and increased UV-induced skin cancer
- Standardise for age, sex, racial origin, etc
12Latency
Cancer takes 10-50 years to develop in man
1900- Cigarette smoking an accepted habit
1940- rise in male lung cancer- alarm
1960- smoking is shown to be the cause of lung
cancer
1960-2000. People who started smoking before
1960 die of lung cancer Lung cancer is the most
frequent site of cancer in UK men
13Epidemiology- issues
- Long latency period- up to 20 years
- Poor for prediction
- Sensitive against low background
- e.g. haemangiosarcoma is vanishingly rare in the
general population, vs high levels in workers
exposed to vinyl chloride monomer - Insensitive against common cancers
- Frequently no measurement of chemical exposure
- Difficult to isolate the cause of cancer
- Unless you are testing for that cause
14Causes of cancer
Note that diet, tobacco, occupation, alcohol and
pollution are principally chemically-induced
cancers.