How Cuts Can Spur Tumor Growth

Cancerous cells flock to wounds, a study finds

February 15, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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By Laura Sanders, Science News

The slightest scratch can cause cancerous cells to crawl to the wound and form tumors in mice, a new study finds. The work may explain why certain kinds of cancers seem to cluster around burns, surgical scars and other injuries.

“This work says that if you have a predisposition to getting cancer, wounding might enhance the chance that it will develop,” says cell biologist Anthony Oro of Stanford University School of Medicine.

A variety of human cancers have been tied to wounds, including lung, liver, bone and skin cancers, but just how and why has been unclear. In the new study, Sunny Wong and Jeremy Reiter of the University of California, San Francisco, introduced a potentially cancer-causing mutation into particular stem cells in mice.

The stem cells live in the part of a hair follicle called the follicular bulge, where they produce new follicles and hair shafts. The researchers expected to see tumors develop around the hair follicles in the mutated mice. But the mice were fine.

If the mice were wounded, however, tumors developed at the injury site. After a pencil-eraser-sized piece of skin was cut from the backs of the mice, cancerous cells migrated to the wound and formed clusters of tumors. These tumors seemed to be a slow-growing and treatable form of skin cancer called basal cell carcinoma. Small incisions similar to paper cuts also caused these stem cells to form tumors nearby, while plucking single hairs did not, the team reports in an upcoming Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

“It’s a very suggestive study that needs to be confirmed on a broader level. But it will certainly stimulate a lot of discussion and interest in this area in the future,” Oro says.
Something in the hair follicle environment may keep these mutated stem cells in check. But a wound calls these stem cells out, making them leave their normal location, travel to the injury site and form tumors, the team found. Just how wounding beckons these cells is a mystery, Reiter says. “It’s a fascinating question but I don’t think anyone knows at this point.”

In the mice, mutated stem cells could still form tumors even if the injury came several weeks after the researchers introduced the mutation. “The bad news is that these primed sleeper cells can exist within the [follicular] bulge and come forward later,” Reiter says.

The new research focused on one particular mutation and one particular cell type, so further studies will be needed to test whether the same sort of thing happens in other tissues and for other kinds of cancer.

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Tags:
brain tumor,
cancer,
injuries

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Yes, I believe this, cause my 51 year old son, who is a mechanic had a tire iron let loose one day at work and hit him in the jaw. It broke a few of his teeth out, and made his mouth almost stay closed shut. He would not see a Dr., cause he didn't want to cause his boss any trouble. They had a very good relationship and were good pals. So in the meantime, this bruise was getting bigger and I told him, he was going to have to do something about it, cause it is getting red all around it, and it looks infected. They sent him to a dental clinic, nearby, and that Dr. told him he better go to the nearest hospital, cause I think you have cancer. He did, on the tonsil and the lymphnode, so then it started growing and stuck out of the side of his neck. He ws sent down to the University of Michigan, and they told him, it was too large to operate, to come back when it shrunk from chemo. So he had chemo for quite awhile and then he also had 7 weeks of radiation. We thought it had disappeared, and in a few weeks he had to go north to get another petscan, and the Dr. said, I don't like the way it is getting hard, so that concerned him as did it I. Well soon, it started growing again. He was told that the University would not operate, because they didn't think they could get it all, they never even called us, or seen it again for the 2nd time. For the second opinion at the Karamon's Institute, in, Detroit, this other Dr. Yoo, said it is inoperable, so now my son is taking chemo and steroids every 3 weeks and lab work every week. We need a better answer than this, Please Dr. Gonzalez help my son and I. Sharon Reed

Sharon Reed of MI 12:26AM May 05, 2012

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