Home / Health / Older Mice Defy Cancer Odds, Develop Fewer Aggressive Lung Tumors
Older Mice Defy Cancer Odds, Develop Fewer Aggressive Lung Tumors
13 Nov
Summary
- Elderly mice develop fewer, less aggressive lung tumors than younger mice
- PTEN gene mutation has stronger effect on cancer in young mice compared to old
- Findings challenge belief that cancer risk increases with age

According to a study conducted by Stanford Medicine researchers and published in 2025, the elderly appear to be at a lower risk for developing cancer compared to their younger counterparts. The study, which observed mice over a 15-week period, found that older rodents (nearly two years old) developed significantly fewer and less aggressive lung tumors than younger mice (four to six months old).
This surprising discovery challenges the widely-held belief that the risk of cancer increases with age. "We would expect that older animals would get more and worse cancers, but that's not at all what the study found," said Dr. Monte Winslow, an associate professor involved in the research.



