Aneuploidy and Carcinogenesis

In June, 2014, my book, entitled Rare Diseases and Orphan Drugs: Keys to Understanding and Treating the Common Diseases was published by Elsevier. The book builds the argument that our best chance of curing the common diseases will come from studying and curing the rare diseases. The book has an extensive glossary, that explains the meaning and relevance of medical terms appearing throughout the chapters. The glossary can be read as a stand-along document. Here is an example of one term, "aneuploidy", excerpted from the glossary.Aneuploidy - The presence of an abnormal number of chromosomes (for the species) in a cell. Most cancers contain aneuploid cells; an observation that holds true for virtually every poorly differentiated cancer. Aneuploidy is seen less often in benign tumors and well-differentiated tumors. Aneuploidy is also found in epithelial precancers and other growing lesions that can sometimes regress spontaneously (e.g., keratoacanthoma). These observations have prompted speculation that chromosomal instability and the acquisition of aneuploidy is an underlying cause of the cancer phenotype (i.e., tumor growth, invasion into surrounding tissues, and metastases). Such causal associations invite skepticism, particularly in the realm of cancer biology, as virtually every cellular process and constituent of cancer cells has been shown to deviate from the norm. Nonetheless, there is good reason to suspect that aneuploidy is at least a factor in tumor developmen...
Source: Specified Life - Category: Pathologists Tags: aneuploidy cancer types carcinogenesis common cancers common disease cytogenetics glossary orphan disease orphan drugs rare cancers rare disease tumor biology tumor types types of cancer Source Type: blogs