Modeling age-specific incidence of colon cancer via niche competition
Steffen Lange, Richard Mogwitz, Denis H\"unniger, Anja Voss-B\"ohme

TL;DR
This paper introduces a cell-based model focusing on early tumor growth in colon cancer, successfully reproducing epidemiological data with only one key parameter, highlighting the importance of early tumor development stages.
Contribution
The model simplifies carcinogenesis modeling by focusing on early tumor growth and uses only one parameter, providing insights into the timing of tumor progression.
Findings
Model reproduces age-specific incidence rates of colon cancer.
Predicted fraction of precancerous lesions aligns with clinical data.
Early tumor growth phase is crucial in determining cancer development.
Abstract
Cancer development is a multistep process often starting with a single cell in which a number of epigenetic and genetic alterations have accumulated thus transforming it into a tumor cell. The progeny of such a single benign tumor cell expands in the tissue and can at some point progress to malignant tumor cells until a detectable tumor is formed. The dynamics from the early phase of a single cell to a detectable tumor with billions of tumor cells are complex and still not fully resolved, not even for the well-known prototype of multistage carcinogenesis, the adenoma-adenocarcinoma sequence of colorectal cancer. Mathematical models of such carcinogenesis are frequently tested and calibrated based on reported age-specific incidence rates of cancer, but they usually require calibration of four or more parameters due to the wide range of processes these models aim to reflect. We present a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth · Caveolin-1 and cellular processes · Cancer Cells and Metastasis
