Big breakthrough in cancer research - 7th November 2022

Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute, London, claim to have cracked the link between air pollution and lung cancer. Their findings radically impact understanding of how cancer arises, as well as suggesting new ways of combating it.

Scientists conducting biomedical research identified that air pollution, rather than being the direct cause of lung cancer, activated cancerous cells. According to the Institute's Professor Charles Swanton, the study "rethinks our understanding of how tumours are initiated."

With pulmonary cancer, ongoing mutations in lung cells lead cells to split and multiply. Yet the research indicates that instead of causing the genetic code to mutate, particulate matter from vehicle fumes actually kickstarts cancer-causing mutations that are already present.

Even healthy lungs contain cell mutations at risk of becoming malignant with a push from air pollution. The study put one pollution contaminant, PM2.5, under the microscope lens. Thinner than a speck of dust, the particle triggers the body to release a chemical alarm signal, in turn switching on dormant cells, some of which may have the detrimental mutations associated with tumours.

Following this breakthrough, researchers might feasibly devote more time to grappling with what sparks mutations, rather than what initially mutates cells.

Struck by the future potential, Professor Swanton said, "Pollution is a lovely example, but there are going to be 200 other examples of this over the next 10 years."

The team made an additional, extraordinary breakthrough by successfully preventing lung cancer from forming in mice exposed to air pollution. Thanks to a drug – interleukin-1-beta – they interrupted the chemical alarm, prompting Professor Swanton to announce a "new era" in cancer prevention.

In the future, those living in urban areas at high risk of exposure might be prescribed the same medication. 1 in 10 lung cancer cases in the UK is caused by external pollutants rather than cigarette smoke, and the breakthrough helps explain why non-smokers can also contract lung cancer.

Michelle Mitchell, Chief Executive of Cancer Research UK, said, "Smoking remains the biggest cause of lung cancer, " but added, "Science, which takes years of painstaking work, is changing our thinking around how cancer develops."

Interactive Games

tried

What's the word you hear?

Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing word. There are up to 10 questions.

Listening
play game
tried

Sentence muddle

Read the sentences. Put them in the same order as the news report. There are 4 sentences.

Reading
play game
tried

Prepositions

Complete the sentences. Select the correct preposition. There are up to 4 questions.

Vocabulary and Grammar
play game
tried

Construct sentences

Make sentences. Select each word in the correct order. There are up to 3 questions.

Writing
play game
tried

What's the phrase you hear?

Complete the sentences. Listen and write the missing phrase. There are up to 5 questions.

Listening
play game
tried

Verbs

Complete the sentences. Select the correct verb. There are 5 questions.

Vocabulary and Grammar
play game
tried

No spaces in text

Read the sentences. Find the spaces between the words. There are up to 5 questions.

Reading
play game
tried

No capital letters

Read the sentences. Find the missing capital letters. There are 5 sentences.

Vocabulary and Grammar
play game
tried

Put the sentence back together

Put the sentence parts in the correct order. Each sentence is in 4 pieces. There are up to 5 questions.

Reading
play game
tried

Comprehension

Answer questions about the news report. Select the correct answer from 4 options. There are 5 questions.

Reading
play game
tried

Spelling jumble

The letters of one word are in the wrong order. Read the sentence. Spell the word correctly. There are up to 10 questions.

Vocabulary and Grammar
play game
tried

Missing vowels

Complete the sentences. Select the correct vowel for each space. There are up to 5 sentences.

Vocabulary and Grammar
play game
tried

Missing words

Complete the sentences. Select the correct word. There are up to 5 questions.

Writing
play game

Study Tools