THE MOSS REPORTS
If you are going to fight a war it is axiomatic that you need
to know your enemy. Yet even now, more than thirty years after the
war on cancer was declared, the disease remains largely a mystery.
What is cancer? It may surprise you to know that scientists are
far from clear on this most fundamental question. While research
in the fields of molecular biology and genetics has yielded many
clues concerning the way in which cancer cells grow and signal to
one another, still there remains little agreement as to the exact
origin - what scientists call the 'pathogenesis' - of cancer.
This week I begin a two-part discussion of a groundbreaking piece
of research which has shown that one particular type of cancer,
stomach cancer, arises not from the stomach lining cells themselves,
but as a result of the influx of bone marrow-derived stem cells
into the tissues of the stomach lining. The role of chronic inflammation
caused by a pre-existing bacterial infection is also elucidated
in this research. The model of cancer causation that emerges from
this work could change our understanding of cancer on a fundamental
level and has wide-ranging implications for the future of cancer
research as a whole.
For thirty years I have been monitoring the field of cancer research
and treatment, chronicling the advances and setbacks, the small
triumphs and the many frustrations of the war on cancer.
The fruit of my long involvement in this field is The
Moss Reports, a comprehensive library of more than two hundred
individual reports on specific cancer diagnoses. For cancer patients,
a Moss Report represents an invaluable
guide and handbook for the journey ahead.
If you would like to order a Moss Report
for yourself or someone you love, you can do so from our website,
www.cancerdecisions.com,
or by calling Diane at 1-800-980-1234
(814-238-3367 from outside the US).
We look forward to helping you.
A NEW VIEW OF CANCER'S ORIGINS
Gastric cancer originates from bone marrow-derived cells. So states
a paper published in late 2004 by scientists at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School (UMMS), Worcester, MA. This paper provides
a radically different view of how stomach cancer comes into existence
and may change the way we view the origin of many other kinds of
cancer as well.
The scientists, headed by Prof. JeanMarie Houghton, MD, PhD of
UMMS's Gastroenterology Department, discovered an unexpected link
between stomach cancer and a type of undifferentiated stem cell
that originates in the bone marrow.
They found that an infection with Helicobacter felis (a bacterium
related to infectious Helicobacter pylori in humans) leads to an
influx of bone marrow-derived stem cells (BMDCs), as the body tries
to repair the injury caused by the infection. Prof. Houghton and
her colleagues showed that this transformation of BMDCs is the event
that actually sparks malignant tumors of the stomach.
In the past, when trying to isolate the source of stomach cancer,
scientists focused on damaged cells in the stomach lining. They
naturally assumed that stomach cancer was caused by the transformation
of normal gastric lining cells into malignant cells. And, indeed,
when pathologists look at stomach cancer cells under the microscope,
they see something that resembles a misshapen version of normal
stomach cells.
However, Prof. Houghton and her colleagues showed that it was these
BMDCs, not the stomach cells themselves, that gave rise to cancer.
This was an unexpected finding, and might cause a shift in thinking
about the formation and progression not only of stomach cancer,
but of several other kinds of cancer as well.
"We have known for years that chronic inflammation causes
cancer, yet we did not know precisely how," said Prof. Houghton.
"Tissue stem cells, which are long-lived cells within organs
that act to repair and replenish cells, have long been thought of
as targets for carcinogens and the source of cancer. We show that
bone marrow-derived stem cells attempt to participate in repair
but, under conditions of inflammation, are unable to behave normally
and instead progress towards cancer. This dramatically changes the
way we think about cancer. If this model applies to human cancer,
we will need to revise our approaches to prevention and treatment."
Like other stem cells, BMDCs are pleuripotent – that is,
they have the ability to develop into many tissue types. To do so
in a normal manner, they require the right environment and the right
signals. In an infected stomach, however, the environment itself
is diseased; therefore, BMDCs mutate and begin to progress towards
cancer.
BMDCs have other cancer-like properties, including:
- the capacity for unlimited growth
- the ability to avoid apoptosis (programmed cell death)
signals
- an altered requirement for growth factors
These properties give them a significant growth advantage, says
Prof. Houghton, making them difficult to control once they have
mutated.
Daring New Model
The authors propose what is a daring new model for the development
of at least one major form of cancer.
First, the Helicobacter organism infects the stomach lining and
establishes a chronic infection, attended by inflammation. The local
immune system is unable to cope successfully. This leads to repeated
cycles of injury and repair. The body finally uses up the local
supply of stem cells, which normally reside in tissues to cope with
just such emergencies. These are in time overwhelmed and compromised
by the infection (Anderson 2001)
This exhaustion of the local "police force" calls forth
a reserve of special "national guard" cells that have
their base camp in the bone marrow. They are specially designed
to deal with such persistent threats to health. These are the cells
that Dr. Houghton has identified as the BMDC stem cells. They are
drawn to, and then engraft themselves into, the beleaguered tissue.
But the BMDCs, depending on environmental cues for development and
differentiation, encounter an abnormal environment of conflicting
growth signals. There follows a downward spiral of metaplasia (the
conversion of normal to abnormal tissue); dysplasia (emergence of
a precancerous growth); and finally carcinoma (frankly malignant
cancer, capable of metastasizing).
Elegant Experiment
In these elegant experiments, scientists used the well established
C57BL/6 mouse model of gastric cancer to test their hypothesis.
In this experiment, C57BL/6 mice, which are susceptible to Helicobacter
induced gastric cancer, had their native bone marrow destroyed by
a lethal dose of irradiation. They were then rescued through transplantation
of bone marrow from other mice.
This new bone marrow had been genetically engineered to display
one of two markers: a protein which fluoresces green, or a distinctive
bacterial enzyme called beta-galactosidase which appears blue when
stained. No other cells in the mouse's body would pick up this distinctive
stain. Additionally, male bone marrow was transplanted into female
mice allowing cells to be tracked using detection of the male specific
Y- chromosome.
The stomachs of these mice were then infected with a strain of
Helicobacter. After six to eight weeks, there was intense die off
(apoptosis) of many of the mice's stomach cells, and after about
20 weeks the glands lining the stomach started to stain blue. The
number of such blue-staining cells increased dramatically and at
one year, 90 percent of the cells within the area of the stomach
where cancer forms had been replaced by blue-staining cells. These
cells were abnormal, showing signs of metaplasia, dysplasia or outright
cancer.
This paper, published in the influential journal Science, thus
offers a new model for the origin (pathogenesis) of epithelial cancer.
This is not inconsequential, for epithelial cancer is another name
for carcinoma, the kind of cancer that affects any tissue covering
bodily surfaces and cavities. This category includes not just stomach
cancer, but breast, pancreas, colon, etc. – in other words,
about 90 percent of all cancers.
Many features of cancer cells become much clearer when viewed within
the context of this new model, including their undifferentiated
nature; their ability for self-renewal; their resistance to programmed
cell death; and their tendency to metastasize and spread quickly.
These are some of the key characteristics shared by stem cells and
cancer cells.
CAM Perspective
From the perspective of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM),
this paper is extremely provocative. Let me offer a few observations:
In their first sentence, the authors state that "the link
between infection, chronic inflammation, and cancer has long been
recognized." But the theory that cancer can be caused by bacterial
infection has not always been accepted so readily by medical authorities.
In fact, many of the researchers in this field suffered instances
of "intellectual suppression, particularly when they developed
clinical applications," according to Prof. David Hess of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY, in his excellent book, Can Bacteria
Cause Cancer? (1997).
According to Prof. Hess, "This theory was supported by a rich
alternative research tradition that involved at least fifty scientists
and clinicians in a number of countries. Popular during the nineteenth
century, the theory received continued support during the twentieth
century as a minority tradition. Although the quality of the research
is very uneven, some of the best of the research has been published
in recognized, peer-reviewed scientific journals." (ibid.)
There were some fine scientists in this group - such as William
B. Coley, MD, Virginia Livingston, MD, and Eleanor Alexander-Jackson,
PhD - who provided rigorous demonstrations of the links between
various bacteria and cancer.
But the medical establishment essentially banished this theory
from the conventional universe of shared ideas. For instance, the
concept was severely criticized by Memorial Hospital pathologist
James Ewing, MD, the most influential American pathologist of his
day. In the first edition of his seminal work, Neoplastic Diseases
(1919), Ewing wrote:
"The parasitic [i.e., microbial] theory...appealed to the
ancients, was tacitly accepted throughout the Middle Ages, was definitely
argued by modern observers, and reached the height of its popularity
as a scientific theory about 1895, but during the last fifteen years
it has rapidly lost ground, and today few competent observers consider
it a possible explanation" of cancer's origins.
Dr. Ewing rejected outright the work of Dr. Peyton Rous of the
Rockefeller Institute, who showed, as early as 1911, that sarcoma
in chickens could be transmitted by a virus. It took another 55
years for Peyton Rous to finally receive his well deserved Nobel
Prize in Medicine precisely for this work.
Similar skepticism greeted Dr. Barry J. Marshall of Perth, Australia,
when he argued in the 1980s that Helicobacter could cause gastroesophageal
reflux disease (GERD), dyspepsia and stomach ulcers. (It is now
understood to also contribute to some forms of stomach cancers.)
Marshall's argument was repeatedly rejected out of hand. According
to his wife, "The vast majority of the medical profession,
not only in Australia but worldwide, considered Barry to be a quack
and really were extremely dismissive for a number of years."
It is encouraging that a younger generation of scientists now regards
the causative connection between microbes and cancer as non-controversial.
But it also needs stating that for many decades, all theories of
bacterial involvement in cancer were suppressed and only found refuge
within the precincts of the CAM movement. This resulted in damage
to the reputations of many fine researchers, a wrong that still
needs to be corrected in the historical record.
TO BE COMPLETED, WITH REFERENCES,
NEXT WEEK
--Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D.
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IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER
The news and other items in this newsletter
are intended for informational purposes only. Nothing in this newsletter
is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice.
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