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Most Cancer Is Bad Luck And Early Detection Is A Cure, Say Hopkins Researchers
Forbes
Two years ago, a mathematician and cancer geneticist from Johns Hopkins kicked up a storm of controversy when they published a paper in the journal Science suggesting that most cancers are caused by random, unavoidable mutations—basically nothing more than bad luck. They were widely criticized for limiting their analysis to the U.S. and leaving out two of the most common and deadly tumor types, breast and prostate cancer.