Colorectal cancer linked to bacteria
Two new studies, one of them involving Simon Fraser University researchers, have uncovered the first link between human colorectal cancer and a specific microorganism.
The studies, just published online in the journal Genome Research, found the bacterium Fusobacterium hundreds of times more prevalent in tumors than normal tissue in 99 colorectal cancer patients.
Fusobacterium is a known infectious agent that is rarely found in the contents of a normal gut. It has not previously been associated with cancer, and it has yet to be proven whether Fusobacterium infection causes or precedes colorectal tumors.
Researchers plan to further investigate the possibility that Fusobacterium could be a direct cause of colon cancer, and if so, by what mechanism. The same methodology can then be applied to look for correlations between infectious agents in other types of cancer. Some other cancers known to be caused by viruses or bacteria are cervical cancer (human papilloma virus) and liver cancer (hepatitis B and C virus).