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Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.

Cancer, by definition, is a proliferative disease. The fundamental scientific issue explored at the international symposium "Cell Proliferation and Chemical Carcinogenesis" was the impact of chemically enhanced cell proliferation on the dynamic carcinogenic processes. This conference, held...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Melnick, R L, Huff, J, Barrett, J C, Maronpot, R R, Lucier, G, Portier, C J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1993
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7912189
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author Melnick, R L
Huff, J
Barrett, J C
Maronpot, R R
Lucier, G
Portier, C J
author_facet Melnick, R L
Huff, J
Barrett, J C
Maronpot, R R
Lucier, G
Portier, C J
author_sort Melnick, R L
collection PubMed
description Cancer, by definition, is a proliferative disease. The fundamental scientific issue explored at the international symposium "Cell Proliferation and Chemical Carcinogenesis" was the impact of chemically enhanced cell proliferation on the dynamic carcinogenic processes. This conference, held at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences January 14-16, 1992, provided an open forum for the exchange of new results, information, and ideas in four areas: a) general principles of cell division and carcinogenesis, b) critical evaluation of cell proliferation methodologies, c) cell proliferation and modeling of organ-specific carcinogenesis, and d) cell proliferation and human carcinogenesis. This overview summarizes key findings from that symposium. The general view expressed was that although cell proliferation is involved inextricably in the development of cancers, chemically enhanced cell division does not reliably predict carcinogenicity. Our knowledge of the multistep nature of carcinogenesis has advanced substantially during recent years; however, much still needs to be learned. A greater understanding of the cellular and molecular events in chemical carcinogenesis should improve all aspects of the overall risk assessment process, including extrapolations based on dose, species, and interindividual differences.
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spelling pubmed-15194322006-07-26 Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview. Melnick, R L Huff, J Barrett, J C Maronpot, R R Lucier, G Portier, C J Environ Health Perspect Research Article Cancer, by definition, is a proliferative disease. The fundamental scientific issue explored at the international symposium "Cell Proliferation and Chemical Carcinogenesis" was the impact of chemically enhanced cell proliferation on the dynamic carcinogenic processes. This conference, held at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences January 14-16, 1992, provided an open forum for the exchange of new results, information, and ideas in four areas: a) general principles of cell division and carcinogenesis, b) critical evaluation of cell proliferation methodologies, c) cell proliferation and modeling of organ-specific carcinogenesis, and d) cell proliferation and human carcinogenesis. This overview summarizes key findings from that symposium. The general view expressed was that although cell proliferation is involved inextricably in the development of cancers, chemically enhanced cell division does not reliably predict carcinogenicity. Our knowledge of the multistep nature of carcinogenesis has advanced substantially during recent years; however, much still needs to be learned. A greater understanding of the cellular and molecular events in chemical carcinogenesis should improve all aspects of the overall risk assessment process, including extrapolations based on dose, species, and interindividual differences. 1993-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1519432/ /pubmed/7912189 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Melnick, R L
Huff, J
Barrett, J C
Maronpot, R R
Lucier, G
Portier, C J
Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title_full Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title_fullStr Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title_full_unstemmed Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title_short Cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
title_sort cell proliferation and chemical carcinogenesis: symposium overview.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1519432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7912189
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