Cancer bacteria are bacteria infectious organisms that are known or suspected to cause cancer.[2] While cancer-associated bacteria have long been considered to be opportunistic (i.e., infecting healthy tissues after cancer has already established itself), there is some evidence that bacteria may be directly carcinogenic. The strongest evidence to date involves the bacterium H. pylori and its role in gastric cancer.[2]
Oncoviruses are viral agents that are similarly suspected of causing cancer.
Helicobacter pylori colonizes the human stomach and duodenum. In some cases it can cause stomach cancer[3][4] and MALT lymphoma.[5] Animal models have demonstrated Koch's third and fourth postulates for the role of Helicobacter pylori in the causation of stomach cancer.[6] The mechanism by which H. pylori causes cancer may involve chronic inflammation, or the direct action of some of its virulence factors, for example, CagA has been implicated in carcinogenesis.[7]
has been linked with certainty to stomach cancer [15] and may be related to MALT lymphoma, but may also protect certain individuals from esophageal cancer.[10]
In 1890, the Scottish pathologist William Russell reported circumstantial evidence for the bacterial cause of cancer.[18] In 1926, Canadian physician Thomas Glover reported that he could consistently isolate a specific bacterium from the neoplastic tissues of animals and humans.[19] One review summarized Glover's report as follows:
The author reports the isolation of a pleomorphic organism from various types of cancer which can be grown in pure cultures in its several phases. He produced a serum from it which has given remarkable results in a series of 50 reported cases. This is very important, if true. We suppose the Cancer Society will give an opinion later on the reliability of the findings."[20]
Glover was asked to continue his work at the Public Health Service (later incorporated into the National Institutes of Health) completing his studies in 1929 and publishing his findings in 1930.[21] He asserted that a vaccine or anti-serum manufactured from his bacterium could be used to treat cancer patients with varying degrees of success.[21] According to historical accounts, scientists from the Public Health Service challenged Glover's claims and asked him to repeat his research to better establish quality control.[22] Glover refused and opted to continue his research independently; not seeking consensus, Glover's claims and results led to controversy and are today not given serious merit.[23]
In 1950, a Newark-based physician named Virginia Livingston published a paper claiming that a specific Mycobacterium was associated with neoplasia.[24] Livingston continued to research the alleged bacterium throughout the 1950s and eventually proposed the name Progenitor cryptocides as well as developed a treatment protocol.[25] Ultimately, her claim of a universal cancer bacterium was not supported in follow up studies. In 1990 the National Cancer Institute published a review of Livingston's theories, concluding that her methods of classifying the cancer bacterium contained "remarkable errors" and it was actually a case of misclassification - the bacterium was actually Staphylococcus epidermidis.[23]
Other researchers and clinicians who worked with the theory that bacteria could cause cancer, especially from the 1930s to the 1960s, included Eleanor Alexander-Jackson, William Coley, William Crofton, Gunther Enderlein, Franz Gerlach, Josef Issels, Elise L'Esperance, Milbank Johnson, Arthur Kendall, Royal Rife, Florence Seibert, Wilhelm von Brehmer, and Ernest Villequez.[26] Alexander-Jackson and Seibert worked with Virginia Livingston. Some of the researchers published reports that also claimed to have found bacteria associated with different types of cancers.[27][28][29][30][31][32]
↑McGarr SE, Ridlon JM, Hylemon PB (February 2005). "Diet, anaerobic bacterial metabolism, and colon cancer: a review of the literature". Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology. 39 (2): 98–109. PMID15681903.
↑Hooper SJ, Wilson MJ, Crean SJ (September 2009). Myers JN (ed.). "Exploring the link between microorganisms and oral cancer: a systematic review of the literature". Head & Neck. 31 (9): 1228–1239. doi:10.1002/hed.21140. PMID19475550. S2CID27269158.
↑Wuerthele-Caspe V, Alexander-Jackson E, Anderson JA, Hillier J, Allen RM, Smith LW (December 1950). "Cultural properties and pathogenicity of certain microorganisms obtained from various proliferative and neoplastic diseases". The American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 220 (6): 638–646. doi:10.1097/00000441-195022060-00006. PMID14789767. S2CID39359507.
↑Livingston VW, Alexander-Jackson E (September 1965). "An experimental biologic approach to the treatment of neoplastic disease; determination of actinomycin in urine and cultures as an aid to diagnosis and prognosis". Journal of the American Medical Women's Association. 20 (9): 858–866. PMID4220493.
↑Hess DJ (1997). Can Bacteria Cause Cancer?. New York: NYU Press. ISBN978-0-8147-3562-6.
↑Mazet, G. (June/August 1941) "Etude bacteriolgigue sur la maladie d'Hodgkin". Montpellier Medicine.
↑Von Brehmer W. "Siphonosopra polymorpha n. sp.: ein neuer microorganismus des blutes, seine beziehung zur tumorgenese". Med Welt. 8: 1178–1185.
↑Crofton WM (1936). The True Nature of Viruses. London, England: Staples Press Ltd.
↑Villesquez EJ (1955). Le Parasitisme Latent des Cellules du Sang chez l' Homme, en Particulier dans le Sang des Cancreeux. Paris, France: Librarie Maloine.
↑Fonti CJ (1958). Eziopatogenese del Cancro. Milan, Italy: Amadeo Nicola.& c.
Pelini P. (1999 2000). "Cancer and metastasis to the lung caused by the bacterium Pseudomonas". Rome, Italy: Figshare. .doi:10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.3382954.