Ducasse Hugo, Ujvari Beata, Solary Eric, Vittecoq Marion, Arnal Audrey, Bernex Florence, Pirot Nelly, Misse Dorothée, Bonhomme François, Renaud François, Thomas Frédéric, Roche Benjamin
MIVEGEC, UMR IRD/CNRS/UM 5290, 911 Avenue Agropolis, BP 64501, 34394, Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
CREEC, 911 Avenue Agropolis, BP 64501, 34394, Montpellier Cedex 5, France.
BMC Cancer. 2015 Oct 24;15:792. doi: 10.1186/s12885-015-1782-z.
Carcinogenesis affects not only humans but almost all metazoan species. Understanding the rules driving the occurrence of cancers in the wild is currently expected to provide crucial insights into identifying how some species may have evolved efficient cancer resistance mechanisms. Recently the absence of correlation across species between cancer prevalence and body size (coined as Peto's paradox) has attracted a lot of attention. Indeed, the disparity between this null hypothesis, where every cell is assumed to have an identical probability to undergo malignant transformation, and empirical observations is particularly important to understand, due to the fact that it could facilitate the identification of animal species that are more resistant to carcinogenesis than expected. Moreover it would open up ways to identify the selective pressures that may be involved in cancer resistance. However, Peto's paradox relies on several questionable assumptions, complicating the interpretation of the divergence between expected and observed cancer incidences.
Here we review and challenge the different hypotheses on which this paradox relies on with the aim of identifying how this null hypothesis could be better estimated in order to provide a standard protocol to study the deviation between theoretical/theoretically predicted and observed cancer incidence. We show that due to the disproportion and restricted nature of available data on animal cancers, applying Peto's hypotheses at species level could result in erroneous conclusions, and actually assume the existence of a paradox. Instead of using species level comparisons, we propose an organ level approach to be a more accurate test of Peto's assumptions.
The accuracy of Peto's paradox assumptions are rarely valid and/or quantifiable, suggesting the need to reconsider the use of Peto's paradox as a null hypothesis in identifying the influence of natural selection on cancer resistance mechanisms.
癌症发生不仅影响人类,几乎所有后生动物物种都会受其影响。目前,人们期望了解驱动野生动物患癌的规则,从而为确定某些物种如何进化出有效的抗癌机制提供关键见解。最近,癌症患病率与体型之间跨物种缺乏相关性(即佩托悖论)引起了广泛关注。实际上,由于该零假设(即假设每个细胞发生恶性转化的概率相同)与实证观察结果之间的差异对于理解尤为重要,因为它有助于识别比预期更具抗癌能力的动物物种。此外,这将为识别可能与抗癌相关的选择压力开辟道路。然而,佩托悖论依赖于几个有问题的假设,这使得对预期和观察到的癌症发病率差异的解释变得复杂。
在此,我们回顾并质疑这一悖论所依赖的不同假设,目的是确定如何能更好地估计该零假设,以便提供一个标准方案来研究理论/理论预测与观察到的癌症发病率之间的偏差。我们表明,由于动物癌症现有数据的不均衡性和局限性,在物种层面应用佩托假设可能会得出错误结论,并且实际上假定了悖论的存在。我们建议采用器官层面的方法,而不是物种层面的比较,作为对佩托假设更准确的检验。
佩托悖论假设的准确性很少有效和/或可量化,这表明有必要重新考虑将佩托悖论用作零假设来确定自然选择对抗癌机制的影响。