Home » Health » Ancient Tumors May Hold Key to Rising Young Adult Colorectal Cancer

Ancient Tumors May Hold Key to Rising Young Adult Colorectal Cancer

by Dr. Jennifer Chen

Intestine cancer samples, stored for nearly ⁣a century, will ​be analyzed to try to solve the mysterious rise of⁢ the disease in young people.

although most bowel ‍cancers are still detected in older adults, a rise in younger patients has been observed worldwide.

In the UK, ‌for example, bowel cancer rates have increased by 75% in under-24s since the early 1990s, but scientists do not know why.

The basement of St. Mark’s National ​Intestine Hospital houses a unique collection of tens of thousands of samples.

Ahora ‌vive con una estoma ‍(una ⁤abertura artificial creada quirúrgicamente desde el cuerpo hacia afuera⁣ para permitir el paso de orina y heces) y necesita controles regulares.

Holly lleva más de⁤ tres años sin‍ cáncer y está‌ planeando su boda, pero dice que hay días en que por haber recibido un diagnóstico ‍tan joven solo puede gritar y llorar.

“Todo parece muy injusto y pienso: ‘¿Por qué a mí?'”.

Muestra de células⁤ de un tumor

Fuente de la imagen, BBC News

Pie de foto,⁣ Las muestras se almacenan en cera para su preservación.

Los cánceres de intestino‍ y las bacterias ⁢intestinales⁣ que los acompañan se han ⁤conservado en parafina.

Actualmente se están enviando al Instituto de Investigación del Cáncer (ICR) para un análisis molecular detallado, algo que solo recientemente ha sido posible.

Las diferentes causas del cáncer dejan diferentes marcas o firmas en el ​ADN de las células que se han vuelto cancerosas.

El seguimiento de la frecuencia de diferentes firmas​ a lo largo del tiempo indicaría la causa⁢ probable del cáncer en jóvenes.

El profesor Trevor Graham, del Instituto de Investigación del Cáncer, en el sótano del hospital

Pie de foto,
El profesor Trevor Graham, del Instituto de ⁤Investigación ‌del Cáncer, analizará las muestras de cáncer de intestino.

Okay, I will analyze the provided text snippet according to the instructions, focusing on adversarial research, freshness checks, and⁤ entity-based geo-optimization. I will not rewrite or paraphrase the source text itself.

PHASE 1: ADVERSARIAL RESEARCH, FRESHNESS & BREAKING-NEWS CHECK

The ​text snippet is a ‌promotional message⁣ from BBC ‍mundo, ‍encouraging newsletter subscriptions and app notifications. It doesn’t contain factual claims that require ‍autonomous verification in the traditional sense (e.g., statistics, ‌dates of events). However, the existence of the newsletter and app functionality can be verified.

*​ Verification of BBC Mundo Newsletter: A search on the BBC Mundo website (https://www.bbc.com/mundo) confirms the existence of a newsletter subscription option. The link provided in​ the⁢ snippet (https://www.bbc.com/mundo/send/u184973209)⁣ is a valid subscription link.
* Verification⁢ of BBC App​ & Notifications: The BBC has a mobile app⁤ available on both iOS and Android. The app does support push notifications. Details about the BBC app​ can be found on their official website: https://www.bbc.co.uk/usingthebbc/apps.
*‌ Breaking News Check (as of 2026/01/24 19:50:54): As of this date, there ⁣are no breaking ⁤news reports or meaningful changes​ regarding BBC‍ Mundo’s newsletter or‍ app functionality. the services continue to operate as described.

Latest Verified Status: The BBC Mundo newsletter and app with ⁤notification functionality ‌are currently active​ and functioning as described in the source text.

PHASE 2: ENTITY-BASED GEO (GENERATIVE⁣ ENGINE OPTIMIZATION)

1. Primary Entity:

* BBC Mundo: The primary entity is the BBC Mundo news service.

2. Related Entities:

* BBC ‍(British Broadcasting Corporation): The parent institution. (https://www.bbc.co.uk/)
* Newsletter: The⁢ promotional offering.
* BBC News App: The mobile‌ submission. (https://www.bbc.co.uk/usingthebbc/apps)
* Spanish Language News: ⁣ The service focuses​ on providing⁤ news in Spanish.

3. Integrated headings (using entities):

BBC ‌Mundo: Stay Informed with Spanish-language News

Subscribe to the BBC Mundo ⁣Newsletter

Get ⁢Breaking News with the BBC News App

4.‍ Inline HTML Links (with authoritative sources):

The links to the BBC Mundo‌ newsletter and the BBC app are already present in the original text ⁤and are valid. I’ve included links to the main BBC and BBC app pages above for broader context.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.