Scientists tie about 200 genes to cancer
Scientists tie about 200 genes to cancer
Mapping genetics of leading cancers scientists have found almost 200 mutated genes in breast and colorectal cancers.

Washington: Scientists mapping genetics of two of the nation's leading cancers have found almost 200 mutated genes in breast and colorectal tumors, many of them never before suspected of helping cancer form and spread.

Doctors have long known it takes a cascade of genetic flaws to trigger any of the myriad types of cancer.

Which genes are working improperly also determines whether a malignancy becomes especially aggressive and even whether a particular treatment is likely to work.

Finding those genes-run-amok could lead to better cancer treatments and even ways to prevent tumors. Scientists have found only a fraction of them.

Now, armed with better technology, a massive quest is beginning to comprehensively map the genetic makeup of different cancers.

On Thursday, scientists at Johns Hopkins University reported the first big success: They examined more than 13,000 genes in 11 different breast tumors and 11 colorectal cancers, removed from patients during surgery.

They found 189 mutated ones that seem to play a role in those two types of cancer.

The sheer number of potential culprits was surprising; researchers had expected to find a few, not dozens.

Importantly, the work stresses that cancers differ greatly from organ to organ: Mutations in the breast tumors were substantially different from those in the colorectal tumors.

Now the harder work begins: Figuring out what those altered genes do and whether ways can be found to target them.

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