(Medical Xpress) -- A new study published in the International Journal of Paleopathology  reveals a case of prostate cancer in a 2,250-year-old mummy. The  researchers also believe that cases of cancer at that time may not be as  rare as previous research has noted.      
The mummy, known as M1, was a male between the ages of 51 and 60  and researchers say he died a slow and painful death. Using  high-resolution computerized tomography, the researchers, led by  radiologist Carlos Prates, found multiple dense, small round tumors in  the pelvis, lumbar spine, upper arms bones and leg bones in M1. These areas are the most common locations affected by metastatic prostate cancer. 
M1 is the oldest known case of prostate cancer discovered in Egypt  but not the oldest case in history. The oldest case of prostate cancer  was discovered in 2007 in a 2,700-year-old Scythian king from Russia.
Previously it was believed that cancer was rare in this time period  and that the increase in cancer cases came with the industrial age and  increase in cancer carcinogens. A 1998 study in the Journal of Paleopathology showed that there were only 176 cases of cancer discovered in over tens of thousands of skeletal remains that had been examined.
However, Prates and his team believe that this number may not be  accurate because previous researchers did not have the appropriate  technology to detect cancer. The tumors discovered in M1 measured  between 0.03 and 0.59 inches. The Multi Detector Computerized  Tomography, or MDCT, scans used to detect these small tumors were not  available until 2005 and any studies done before this time were not able  to detect tumors this small.
 Using this new technology, researchers hope to get a better  understanding of cancer’s beginnings and the possibility of using  information gathered to contribute to finding a cure for cancer.

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