Never Chuffed a Dart? You’re Still at Risk of Lung Cancer Thanks To Air Pollution
“They also found that air pollution drives the influx of macrophages which release the inflammatory mediator, interleukin-1β, driving the expansion of cells with the EGFR mutations in response to exposure to PM2.5, and that blockade of interleukin-1β inhibited lung cancer initiation. These findings were consistent with data from a previous large clinical trial showing a dose dependent reduction in lung cancer incidence when people were treated with the anti-IL1β antibody, canakinumab.”Additionally, using high-quality mutation profiling equipment, the team identifies EDGR driver mutations in 18 per cent of normal lung samples. KRAS was found in 33 per cent of the samples. Swanton added that they were “likely a consequence of aging”. He elaborated:
“In our research, these mutations alone only weakly potentiated cancer in laboratory models. However, when lung cells with these mutations were exposed to air pollutants, we saw more cancers and these occurred more quickly than when lung cells with these mutations were not exposed to pollutants, suggesting that air pollution promotes the initiation of lung cancer in cells harbouring driver gene mutations.”“We have known about the link between pollution and lung cancer for a long time, and we now have a possible explanation for it,” said Tony Mok from the Chinese University of Hong Kong. “As consumption of fossil fuels goes hand in hand with pollution and carbon emissions, we have a strong mandate for tackling these issues – for both environmental and health reasons.” Swanton added that the next step in the research is finding out why some lung cells with the genes mutate in response to pollution while others don’t. These findings were presented in full at the ESMO Congress 2022.
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