IRD, MIVEGEC (UMR CNRS/IRD/UM1), Montpellier, France.
Biol Lett. 2012 Feb 23;8(1):101-3. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.0588. Epub 2011 Jul 27.
We explored associations between the common protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii and brain cancers in human populations. We predicted that T. gondii could increase the risk of brain cancer because it is a long-lived parasite that encysts in the brain, where it provokes inflammation and inhibits apoptosis. We used a medical geography approach based on the national incidence of brain cancers and seroprevalence of T. gondii. We corrected reports of incidence for national gross domestic product because wealth probably increases the ability to detect cancer. We also included gender, cell phone use and latitude as variables in our initial models. Prevalence of T. gondii explained 19 per cent of the residual variance in brain cancer incidence after controlling for the positive effects of gross domestic product and latitude among nations. Infection with T. gondii was associated with a 1.8-fold increase in the risk of brain cancers across the range of T. gondii prevalence in our dataset (4-67%). These results, though correlational, suggest that T. gondii should be investigated further as a possible oncogenic pathogen of humans.
我们探讨了常见的原生动物寄生虫弓形虫与人脑癌症之间的关联。我们预测,弓形虫可能会增加患脑癌的风险,因为它是一种在大脑中形成囊的长寿寄生虫,会引发炎症并抑制细胞凋亡。我们使用了一种基于脑癌发病率和弓形虫血清阳性率的医学地理学方法。我们对国内生产总值进行了调整,因为财富可能会增加癌症检测能力。我们还在初步模型中包含了性别、手机使用和纬度等变量。在控制了国家国内生产总值和纬度对脑癌发病率的积极影响后,我们发现,19%的脑癌发病率的剩余方差可以用弓形虫的流行情况来解释。在我们的数据集中,弓形虫流行率在 4%到 67%之间变化,感染弓形虫会使患脑癌的风险增加 1.8 倍。尽管这些结果是相关的,但它们表明,弓形虫应该作为一种可能的人类致癌病原体进行进一步研究。