Health and medicine/Diseases and disorders/Cancer/Breast cancer
Tracking these potential precancerous red flags may enable doctors to better predict and prevent breast cancer in women with the BRCA2 mutation.
Nearly two-thirds of mutations in human cancers are attributable to random errors that occur naturally in healthy, dividing cells during DNA replication, researchers report in the 24 March issue of Science. Though mutations that cause human cancer have traditionally been thought to originate from heredity or environmental sources, these results — grounded in a novel mathematical model based on data from around the world — support a role for so-called "R" or random mutations in driving the disease.