Authors
Angelo M De Marzo, Elizabeth A Platz, Siobhan Sutcliffe, Jianfeng Xu, Henrik Grönberg, Charles G Drake, Yasutomo Nakai, William B Isaacs, William G Nelson
Publication date
2007/4
Source
Nature Reviews Cancer
Volume
7
Issue
4
Pages
256-269
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
About 20% of all human cancers are caused by chronic infection or chronic inflammatory states. Recently, a new hypothesis has been proposed for prostate carcinogenesis. It proposes that exposure to environmental factors such as infectious agents and dietary carcinogens, and hormonal imbalances lead to injury of the prostate and to the development of chronic inflammation and regenerative 'risk factor' lesions, referred to as proliferative inflammatory atrophy (PIA). By developing new experimental animal models coupled with classical epidemiological studies, genetic epidemiological studies and molecular pathological approaches, we should be able to determine whether prostate cancer is driven by inflammation, and if so, to develop new strategies to prevent the disease.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AM De Marzo, EA Platz, S Sutcliffe, J Xu, H Grönberg… - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2007