Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer.
Publication
, Journal Article
Durrett, R; Moseley, S
Published in: Theoretical population biology
February 2010
Inspired by previous work of Iwasa et al. (2006) and Haeno et al. (2007), we consider an exponentially growing population of cancerous cells that will evolve resistance to treatment after one mutation or display a disease phenotype after two or more mutations. We prove results about the distribution of the first time when k mutations have accumulated in some cell, and about the growth of the number of type-k cells. We show that our results can be used to derive the previous results about a tumor grown to a fixed size.
Duke Scholars
Published In
Theoretical population biology
DOI
EISSN
1096-0325
ISSN
0040-5809
Publication Date
February 2010
Volume
77
Issue
1
Start / End Page
42 / 48
Related Subject Headings
- Phenotype
- Neoplasms
- Mutation
- Models, Genetic
- Humans
- Evolutionary Biology
- Disease Progression
- Disease Models, Animal
- Biological Evolution
- Animals
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Durrett, R., & Moseley, S. (2010). Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer. Theoretical Population Biology, 77(1), 42–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2009.10.008
Durrett, Richard, and Stephen Moseley. “Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer.” Theoretical Population Biology 77, no. 1 (February 2010): 42–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tpb.2009.10.008.
Durrett R, Moseley S. Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer. Theoretical population biology. 2010 Feb;77(1):42–8.
Durrett, Richard, and Stephen Moseley. “Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer.” Theoretical Population Biology, vol. 77, no. 1, Feb. 2010, pp. 42–48. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.tpb.2009.10.008.
Durrett R, Moseley S. Evolution of resistance and progression to disease during clonal expansion of cancer. Theoretical population biology. 2010 Feb;77(1):42–48.
Published In
Theoretical population biology
DOI
EISSN
1096-0325
ISSN
0040-5809
Publication Date
February 2010
Volume
77
Issue
1
Start / End Page
42 / 48
Related Subject Headings
- Phenotype
- Neoplasms
- Mutation
- Models, Genetic
- Humans
- Evolutionary Biology
- Disease Progression
- Disease Models, Animal
- Biological Evolution
- Animals