Vancouver Sun

Man died of cancer 4,500 years ago

Analysis of skeletal remains reveals what may be oldest known case of disease

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SASKATOON — A group of researcher­s, including a Saskatchew­an scientist, have found what may be the oldest case of human cancer in the world.

Bones of a man exhumed in Siberia that date back 4,500 years to the Early Bronze Age show he had lung or prostate cancer, which eventually spread through his body from his hip to his head. He died between 35 and 45 years of age.

“This is one of — if not the oldest — absolute cases of cancer that we can be really, really confident saying that it’s cancer,” said Angela Lieverse, a bioarcheol­ogist at the University of Saskatchew­an in Saskatoon.

She said there have been similar cancer discoverie­s in remains estimated to be 5,000 to 6,000 years old. But those involved unconfirme­d cancers or tumours that were later found to be benign.

The latest study, co- authored by Daniel Temple from George Mason University in Virginia and Vladimir Bazaliiski­i with Irkutsk State University in Russia, was published Wednesday in the scientific journal PLOS ONE.

Lieverse said the cancer she and her partners found refutes a widely held belief that the disease is a modern phenomenon.

“We’ve had this perception that it was almost non- existent in antiquity, because people didn’t live the same kind of lifestyle that we live now. They lived in these pure, toxin- free environmen­ts and they were very active and ate natural foods,” she said.

“But it was more common than we like to think it was.”

Lieverse speculates that as well as non- environmen­tal factors, natural carcinogen­s played a role in ancient cancers. The man in the study was a huntergath­erer, who would have built wood fires to keep warm in the cool climate. He would have often inhaled smoke, which could have given him lung cancer, she suggested.

The cancer then ate holes throughout the man’s bones, which were meticulous­ly preserved and therefore easier to diagnose than typical remains.

Lieverse said as soon as she saw the skeleton in 2012, she recognized the marks left by cancer.

She had travelled to Russia as part of a project based at the University of Alberta that studied age- old hunter- gatherers in northeast Asia. But when she saw the bones of the man, her research began to focus on him.

She stayed for months documentin­g the remains and taking photograph­s.

Lieverse said the man had been buried in a small cemetery in the Cis- Baikal region. He was found in a fetal position in a circular pit with an intricatel­y carved bone spoon, unlike most men of the time who were buried lying on their backs with their fishing or hunting gear.

He must have lived a distinct life in his community, she said, but he also would have experience­d a most agonizing death. Near the end, he would have been nauseous, fatigued, unable to breathe and in constant pain.

“It’s a tragic story. It breaks your heart to think of what he went through.”

 ?? ANGELA LIEVERSE/ UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Angela Lieverse, a bioarcheol­ogist at the University of Saskatchew­an, suggests natural carcinogen­s contribute­d to cancer in a man whose remains were discovered in Siberia.
ANGELA LIEVERSE/ UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Angela Lieverse, a bioarcheol­ogist at the University of Saskatchew­an, suggests natural carcinogen­s contribute­d to cancer in a man whose remains were discovered in Siberia.

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