PMID: 8977039Jan 1, 1996Paper

Clonal chromosome abnormalities in neoplastic cells: evidence of genetic instability?

Cancer Surveys
S Heim

Abstract

All types of neoplasia that have been extensively examined, be they benign or malignant, are characterized by acquired chromosomal aberrations. In many instances, the changes are specific for the tumour type in question. Some tumours, even among the most malignant ones, have only a single chromosomal abnormality, whereas others have numerous secondary aberrations. Although an overall parallel exists between a tumour's malignancy and the number and complexity of its chromosomal changes, in some situations altered selection pressure may give rise to reduced karyotypic complexity with time. The effective causes of both primary and secondary chromosomal changes of neoplastic cells are largely unknown. In some special situations, in particular therapy induced acute leukaemias, exposure to a carcinogenic agent seems to have specifically induced the leukaemogenic genetic rearrangement. Patients carrying malignant neoplasms have in most studies been found to have normal chromosomal stability in their non-neoplastic somatic cells, both generally and at the genomic regions that are rearranged in their tumours. Although abnormal chromosomal fragility of cells belonging to the neoplastic parenchyma has not been convincingly demonstrated, t...Continue Reading

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