Lyman G H
Medicine Service, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida.
Prim Care. 1992 Sep;19(3):465-79.
It is no longer reasonable to divide cancers into those that are genetic in origin and those that are environmental in origin. With rare exception, carcinogenesis involves environmental factors that directly or indirectly exert a change in the cell's genome. Virtually all causes of cancer are multifactorial, sometimes involving an inherited predisposition to the carcinogenic effects of environmental factors, which include chemicals, ionizing radiation, and oncogenic virus. Carcinogenesis is a multistep process including induction, promotion, and progression. Initiation requires an irreversible change in the cellular genome, whereas promotion is commonly associated with prolonged and reversible exposure. Tumor progression results in genotypic and phenotypic changes associated with tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. Most information on human cancer risk is based on epidemiologic studies involving both exposed and unexposed individuals. The quality of such studies depends on their ability to assess the strength of any association of exposure and disease and careful attention to any potential bias. Few cancers are inherited in a Mendelian fashion. Several preneoplastic conditions, however, are clearly inherited and several malignancies demonstrate weak familial patterns. Environmental factors may exert their effect on DNA in a random fashion, but certain consistent changes, including specific translocations of genetic information, are often found. Currently, there is great interest in the close proximity of certain oncogenes governing growth control to the consistent chromosomal changes observed. Such changes may represent a final common pathway of action for environmental carcinogens. Sufficient laboratory and epidemiologic evidence exists to establish a causal association of several chemical agents with cancer. The most important carcinogenic chemicals are associated with life-style factors, whereas agents related to other environmental, occupational, or medical exposure are numerically less important. Most chemical agents exert their carcinogenic effects as electrophilic reactants covalently binding to DNA. Certain agents such as asbestos are carcinogenic by virtue of their physical properties. Several short-term tests have been used to screen for chemical carcinogens. Whole-animal studies remain the standard for predicting carcinogen risk in humans, although major limitations in such studies exist. Ionizing radiation also exerts its carcinogenic effect through damage to cellular macromolecules including DNA. Excess cancer risk appears after a latent period of several years following exposure. Risk increases in approximately a linear fashion in proportion to the radiation energy, cumulative dose, and a variety of host biologic factors. The greatest source of average radiation exposure to the US population is from the uranium decay product radon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
将癌症分为起源于遗传因素的和起源于环境因素的已不再合理。除了极少数例外情况,致癌过程涉及直接或间接导致细胞基因组发生变化的环境因素。几乎所有癌症的病因都是多因素的,有时涉及对环境因素致癌作用的遗传易感性,这些环境因素包括化学物质、电离辐射和致癌病毒。致癌作用是一个多步骤过程,包括启动、促进和进展。启动需要细胞基因组发生不可逆的变化,而促进通常与长期且可逆的暴露相关。肿瘤进展会导致与肿瘤生长、侵袭和转移相关的基因型和表型变化。关于人类癌症风险的大多数信息基于涉及暴露个体和未暴露个体的流行病学研究。此类研究的质量取决于其评估暴露与疾病之间任何关联强度的能力以及对任何潜在偏差的仔细关注。很少有癌症以孟德尔方式遗传。然而,几种癌前病变显然是遗传性的,并且几种恶性肿瘤表现出微弱的家族模式。环境因素可能以随机方式对DNA产生影响,但经常会发现某些一致的变化,包括遗传信息的特定易位。目前,人们对某些控制生长的癌基因与所观察到的一致染色体变化的紧密联系非常感兴趣。此类变化可能代表环境致癌物作用的最终共同途径。有足够的实验室和流行病学证据来确立几种化学物质与癌症之间的因果关联。最重要的致癌化学物质与生活方式因素有关,而与其他环境、职业或医疗暴露相关的物质在数量上则不那么重要。大多数化学物质作为亲电反应物与DNA共价结合发挥其致癌作用。某些物质,如石棉,因其物理性质而具有致癌性。已经使用了几种短期试验来筛选化学致癌物。全动物研究仍然是预测人类致癌物风险的标准,尽管此类研究存在重大局限性。电离辐射也通过对包括DNA在内的细胞大分子造成损伤来发挥其致癌作用。暴露后经过数年的潜伏期会出现额外的癌症风险。风险大致呈线性增加,与辐射能量、累积剂量以及多种宿主生物学因素成比例。美国人群平均辐射暴露的最大来源是铀衰变产物氡。(摘要截选至400字)