Four Major Phases of Tumor Formation
To summarize, there are four major phases of tumor formation.
Each phase can take years to complete. The first one alone
usually takes anywhere from 15 to 30 years.
The first phase occurs when normal cells mutate into tumor cells
and begin dividing out-of-control. This may take place over
successive generations of cells. When just the right mutations
occur, the cells will divide and grow to a small tumor.
The second phase is called Carcinoma in situ. This phase is
classified by the presence of a cancerous tumor that has not yet
invaded other tissues. This phase usually lasts between 5-10
years and is limited by the nutrient flow to the tumor. If blood
vessels can be induced to grow into the tumor (angiogenesis),
the tumor will progress to the next phase, called the invasive
stage.
The invasive phase can happen rapidly, requiring only a few
months. However, in some cases it may take up to five years.
This phase is dependent on the ability of the tumor to invoke
nearby blood vessels to grow toward it and provide it with
nutrients - commonly referred to as angiogenesis.
Metastasis, or dissemination to other tissues if the final
phase. This phase has the same time period as the invasive
phase, ranging from a few months to five years.
At each phase, the cancer can either progress further or
altogether diminish. If you add each phase up, the average for
the cell mutating events and cancer diagnosis is 20-50 years
apart. This is why cancer mostly affects older people. Actually,
half of all cancers are diagnosed after the age of 65.
A Few Checks and Balances... - Mutations must occur, but the
cell must still live and divide. - DNA repair mechanisms must
not be activated. - Our own immune system must not find the
tumor and destroy it. - The tumor must get enough nutrients to
continue to grow.