Recent research presents striking statistical evidence that challenges conventional cancer biology. Analysis of melanoma progression revealed a distinct three-phase pattern: cancer spread was lowest in young mice, surged dramatically in middle-aged mice, then dropped significantly in very old mice. This non-linear progression defies the widely accepted assumption that cancer risk increases steadily with advancing age.
The data suggests that middle age represents a critical vulnerability window for melanoma metastasis. Rather than aging being universally protective or harmful, the relationship appears highly stage-dependent. These findings underscore the need for age-stratified clinical approaches and warrant further investigation into the immune mechanisms that may explain the protective phenomenon observed in extreme old age.
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