Title: A smoking gun Detecting causes of disease
1A smoking gun? Detecting causes of disease
- R. Fielding
- Dept. Community Medicine,
- HKU
- http//www.commed.hku.hk/
2Learning objectives
- Critically review the concept of causality in
relation to disease.
- Know Hills Criteria for Causality and why such
criteria are needed
- Offer coherent arguments of nature versus nurture
on health and disease.
3Different levels of causality
4Thinking about causality
- What does the term cause imply?
- That which produces an effect (Chambers 20th
C)
- Causality is the relation of cause and effect.
- In health care, we usually talk of cause and
effect as etiological factor (cause) and disease
or pathological process (effect), e.g
- Strep. Pneumoniea causes pneumonia and
meningitis.
- Arterial occlusion causes tissue necrosis
5Is that what we mean?
- However, what we really mean is
- infection with Strep. Pneumoniea, under a limited
range of conditions, can lead to the development
of pneumonia and meningitis.
- Arterial occlusion leads to tissue necrosis.
- Is this splitting hairs? No, because it reflects
our thinking about disease what it is, its
causes, and, most importantly, what strategies
are used to tackle it.
6Different levels of causality
- Very few things have single, isolated causes.
Instead they reflect chains or nets, temporal
sequences of events.
- Proximal causes close factors
- Distal causes distant factors
- Predisposing factors
- Genetic
- Environmental
- Lifestyle
7Distinguishing cause and determinants from chance
associations
- Many factors influence the development of disease
in addition to the direct cause.
- Investigation of cause is complex
- nature of affected (and unaffected individuals)
- nature of their exposure
8Koch's Postulates
1. The specific organism should be shown to be
present in all cases of animals suffering from a
specific disease but should not be found in
healthy animals. 2. The specific microorganism s
hould be isolated from the diseased animal and
grown in pure culture on artificial laboratory
media. 3. This freshly isolated microorganism, w
hen inoculated into a healthy laboratory animal,
should cause the same disease seen in the
original animal. 4. The microorganism should be
reisolated in pure culture from the experimental
infection.
9Hills criteria
- Strength of association
- Temporal relationship
- Distribution of the disease
- Gradient
- Consistency
- Specificity
- Biological plausability
- Experimental models
- Preventive trials
10Risk
- Risk is the likelihood of an event occurring. In
health care events, we usually consider a
negative consequence arising from exposure to a
hazard. - Types of risk
- Absolute incidence of disease in any population
- Relative ratio of the incidence rate in the
group exposed to the hazard to the incidence rate
in the non-exposed group
- Attributable Difference in incidence rates
between exposed and non-exposed groups.
11How are different causal levels often
misconstrued?
12Errors in thinking about causality
- The following reflect common mistakes in thinking
about causes of disease
- Genes cause disease
- Disease is due to "Lifestyle
- Environment accounts for most variation in
disease rates
- Why are they problematic?
- What do you think?
13Family history
- Family history of a disease, e.g. cancer, is seen
as indicating high-risk status.
- But
- those dying younger have less chance to manifest
disease, so offspring have less family history
- those living longer more likely to develop
disease, but longevity ignored as benefit to
offspring.
14Problematic thinking disease-gene
- All disease is a product of gene-environment
interaction.
- Genes specify protein structures -ONLY
- Only when genes come into contact with an
environment is their advantage or disadvantage
apparent environment could be cellular or
geographic. - Lifestyle, (includes ageing, nutrition,
infection, toxin exposure)
15Do genes cause disease?
- It all dependson whoyou ask
- Differentiate
- gene
- a. genetic material instructing proteins that
confer relative advantage or disadvantage
(inherited polymorphisms) normal.
- b. germ-line mutations instructing proteins that
confer relative advantage or disadvantage
(sporadic/random polymorphisms) in germ cells -
inheritable - c. somatic mutation instructing proteins that
confer relative advantage or disadvantage
(sporadic or random) limited to one cell.
16- ...and other cellular levels
- d. Transcription/repair errors mistakes in
reading /repairing DNA, RNA, or ribosome control
(see c.).
- e. Cellular dysfunction in protein synthesis
- f. Internal modification or modulation of
cellular responses to external factors
- .However,
- a, b, genetic disease, are really normal
genetic processes through which evolution occurs
only the disadvantage is disease advantage is
not. - c-f involve external factors
- all translate into greater or lesser
susceptibility to incur problems in certain
environments
17How might they act?
- Mono-genetic effects - e.g. thalassemia (rare)
- Complex effects - e.g. cancer and almost every
other disease
- Variations in metabolism of environmental toxins
(e.g. via C450 polymorphs)
- Behavioural (through polymorphs, e.g. various
sensitivity to certain chemicals like adrenaline,
dopamine)
18To what extent is the burden of disease due to
different components?
19What proportion of cancer is due to
cancer-causing genes?
- Can you see what is wrong with this question?
- Only 10 of cancers are believed to be related
to specific cancer causing genes, e.g. BRCA1
- Of these, most are interactive, accounted for
by e.g. Ca prostate (40 of risk due to
heritable factors Ca Br. 27 colorectal, 35).
- Very few, rare cancers, e.g. retinoblastoma
20Epidemiological model for disease evaluation
21Comparison of US Federal expenditure to
allocation of mortality according to
epidemiological model
22Interactions
- Genes do not cause diseases. It is wrong to
claim they do. Genes instruct the manufacture of
proteins, which may or may not advantage or
disadvantage the organism under certain
conditions. - Similarly, no single disease can be attributed to
environment. Even poisoning is influenced by
phenotypical detoxification, which is genetically
modulated. - Lifestyle is even more complex that either genes
or environment.
23Barkers Hypothesis
- Barkers Hypothesis
- Take a look at the above link for further
information.