4,500-Year-Old Cancer in Human Fossils

Image | Ancient Cancer

Caption: Not a well man. (Angela Lieverse/University of Saskatchewan/The Canadian Press)

Audio | Quirks and Quarks : 4,500 Year Old Cancer in Human Fossils - 2014/12/13 - Pt. 2

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What is believed to be the oldest evidence of human cancer has been identified. The bones of a 35-to-45-year-old man who died 4,500 years ago in Siberia were recently studied by Dr. Angela Lieverse(external link), a bio-archaeologist from The University of Saskatchewan. The bones had many of what Dr. Lieverse calles "destructive lesions" - essentially holes. These are characteristic of a soft-tissue cancer, perhaps of the lungs or prostate, which had spread to the bones. She suggests one scenario is that in the cold of Siberia the man would have been exposed to a lot of smoke from wood fires which might have led to lung cancer. The study supports the idea that cancer is not an exclusively modern phenomenon.

Related Links
- Paper(external link) in PLOS One
- University of Saskatchewan release(external link)
- CP/CBC News story
- The Siberian Times story(external link)