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The prisoner's dilemma as a cancer model
- Source :
- Convergent science physical oncology. 2(3)
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Tumor development is an evolutionary process in which a heterogeneous population of cells with different growth capabilities compete for resources in order to gain a proliferative advantage. What are the minimal ingredients needed to recreate some of the emergent features of such a developing complex ecosystem? What is a tumor doing before we can detect it? We outline a mathematical model, driven by a stochastic Moran process, in which cancer cells and healthy cells compete for dominance in the population. Each are assigned payoffs according to a Prisoner’s Dilemma evolutionary game where the healthy cells are the cooperators and the cancer cells are the defectors. With point mutational dynamics, heredity, and a fitness landscape controlling birth and death rates, natural selection acts on the cell population and simulated ‘cancer-like’ features emerge, such as Gompertzian tumor growth driven by heterogeneity, the log-kill law which (linearly) relates therapeutic dose density to the (log) probability of cancer cell survival, and the Norton-Simon hypothesis which (linearly) relates tumor regression rates to tumor growth rates. We highlight the utility, clarity, and power that such models provide, despite (and because of) their simplicity and built-in assumptions.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
education.field_of_study
Natural selection
Fitness landscape
Cancer Model
Population
Evolutionary game theory
Prisoner's dilemma
Biology
Birth–death process
Article
03 medical and health sciences
Psychiatry and Mental health
030104 developmental biology
0302 clinical medicine
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Econometrics
Moran process
education
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20571739
- Volume :
- 2
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Convergent science physical oncology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....28e6c62e058343f580727367bdbbc0c7