{"title":"Lifetime-independent risk of a second primary cancer in artificial populations subjected to frailty and cell senescence effects","authors":"Luis Soto-Ortiz, J. Brody","doi":"10.12988/ASB.2015.514","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In the past, the age-specific incidence of most forms of cancer was widely thought to increase monotonically with age. However, cancer registry data show that the specific incidence for many forms of cancer increases with age, reaches a maximum, and then decreases. At least two hypotheses have been proposed to explain this decrease: the cell senescence hypothesis and the frailty hypothesis. The objective of our work was to formulate a stochastic model of cancer incidence to estimate the lifetime-independent odds ratio (LIOR) measuring the risk of developing a second primary cancer, conditioned on a first cancer diagnosis, relative to the risk of developing a first primary cancer, in two artificial populations: one where cancer susceptibility is universal and one where only a small proportion of individuals are born susceptible, or frail, to developing one or more cancers. The predicted LIOR values were significantly greater than 1, only 180 Luis Francisco Soto-Ortiz and James P. Brody when a frailty effect was introduced in the model. This result suggests that if a limited proportion of the United States population were innately susceptible to developing cancer, this would be reflected in a LIOR value significantly greater than 1. In addition, the model predicts that the smaller the pool of susceptibles in a population, the larger the computed LIOR value would be. This one-to-one mapping between a LIOR value and the corresponding proportion of susceptibles indicates that a LIOR value could be used to indirectly estimate the proportion of individuals born predisposed to developing a particular type of cancer. Moreover, this result raises the possibility that a LIOR value could be used as a metric to assess how the relative risk of developing a second primary cancer, varies by cancer type in a given geographical region.","PeriodicalId":7194,"journal":{"name":"Advanced Studies in Biology","volume":"5 1","pages":"179-202"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Advanced Studies in Biology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.12988/ASB.2015.514","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
In the past, the age-specific incidence of most forms of cancer was widely thought to increase monotonically with age. However, cancer registry data show that the specific incidence for many forms of cancer increases with age, reaches a maximum, and then decreases. At least two hypotheses have been proposed to explain this decrease: the cell senescence hypothesis and the frailty hypothesis. The objective of our work was to formulate a stochastic model of cancer incidence to estimate the lifetime-independent odds ratio (LIOR) measuring the risk of developing a second primary cancer, conditioned on a first cancer diagnosis, relative to the risk of developing a first primary cancer, in two artificial populations: one where cancer susceptibility is universal and one where only a small proportion of individuals are born susceptible, or frail, to developing one or more cancers. The predicted LIOR values were significantly greater than 1, only 180 Luis Francisco Soto-Ortiz and James P. Brody when a frailty effect was introduced in the model. This result suggests that if a limited proportion of the United States population were innately susceptible to developing cancer, this would be reflected in a LIOR value significantly greater than 1. In addition, the model predicts that the smaller the pool of susceptibles in a population, the larger the computed LIOR value would be. This one-to-one mapping between a LIOR value and the corresponding proportion of susceptibles indicates that a LIOR value could be used to indirectly estimate the proportion of individuals born predisposed to developing a particular type of cancer. Moreover, this result raises the possibility that a LIOR value could be used as a metric to assess how the relative risk of developing a second primary cancer, varies by cancer type in a given geographical region.
过去,人们普遍认为大多数癌症的年龄特异性发病率随着年龄的增长而单调增加。然而,癌症登记数据显示,许多癌症的具体发病率随着年龄的增长而增加,达到最大值,然后下降。至少有两种假说被提出来解释这种减少:细胞衰老假说和脆弱假说。我们工作的目的是制定一个癌症发病率的随机模型,以估计在两个人工人群中,以首次癌症诊断为条件,相对于发展为第一次原发性癌症的风险,衡量发展为第二次原发性癌症的风险的终身独立优势比(LIOR):一个是癌症易感性普遍的人群,另一个是只有一小部分人出生时易感或虚弱,发展为一种或多种癌症。当模型中引入脆弱效应时,Luis Francisco Soto-Ortiz和James P. Brody的预测LIOR值显著大于1,只有180。这一结果表明,如果美国人口中有一定比例的人天生易患癌症,这将体现在LIOR值显著大于1。此外,该模型预测,人群中易感人群越小,计算出的LIOR值越大。这种LIOR值与相应易感人群比例之间的一对一映射表明,LIOR值可以用来间接估计出生时易患某种特定类型癌症的个体比例。此外,这一结果提出了一种可能性,即LIOR值可以作为一种指标来评估在给定的地理区域中,不同癌症类型发生第二原发性癌症的相对风险是如何变化的。