L. Kozma, AGE-DEPENDENT VARIATION OF DOUBLING TIMES IN MALIGNANT DISORDERS - WHY ARE THE DOUBLING TIMES OF TUMORS IN CHILDHOOD SHORTER THAN IN ADULTHOOD, Medical hypotheses, 50(5), 1998, pp. 419-422
The proportion of patients with any given type of cancer in relation t
o all cases with malignant disorders in the same age-group exhibits a
characteristic age-dependent variation. The values of age of maximal r
elative frequency (AMRF) were determined from statistics for seven can
cer clusters grouped by target organ. The results of this study reveal
that there exists a theoretical way of estimating AMRF by the linear
combination of the approximative average values of tumour doubling tim
es and the age of half-time development of the respective organ. The g
ood correlation (corr. coeff. = 0.985, P less than or equal to 0.001)
between the observed and calculated values for AMRF makes the standard
error of the calculation as low as 7.3 years. The conclusion is that
in young developing organisms, only those tumours with short doubling
time are likely to exist and survive, whereas later, during the period
of organic involution and weakening cell-cell cooperation, more and m
ore cancer types of longer doubling time can establish themselves. It
seems that weak cellular cooperation yields way to malignancy; neverth
eless, the normal growth rate of the target tissue has to be exceeded
by the potential tumour. A slowly growing tumour in rapidly growing no
rmal tissue is counterselected.