Debunking mathematically the logical fallacy that cancer risk is just “bad luck”


Date

2015-12-01

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

Tomasetti and Vogelstein recently proposed that the majority of variation in cancer risk among tissues is due to “bad luck,” that is, random mutations arising during DNA replication in normal noncancerous stem cells. They generalize this finding to cancer overall, claiming that “the stochastic effects of DNA replication appear to be the major contributor to cancer in humans.” We show that this conclusion results from a logical fallacy based on ignoring the influence of population heterogeneity in correlations exhibited at the level of the whole population. Because environmental and genetic factors cannot explain the huge differences in cancer rates between different organs, it is wrong to conclude that these factors play a minor role in cancer rates. In contrast, we show that one can indeed measure huge differences in cancer rates between different organs and, at the same time, observe a strong effect of environmental and genetic factors in cancer rates.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

3

Pages / Article No.

10

Publisher

Springer

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Cancer risk; Familial adenomatous polyposis; Lung cancer risk; Cancer rate; Huge difference

Organisational unit

03738 - Sornette, Didier (emeritus) / Sornette, Didier (emeritus) check_circle

Notes

Funding

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