Extensive facial skeleton defects of a 2,000-year-old Egyptian mummy may indicate that she had nasopharyngeal cancer, says Marzena Ożarek-Szilke palaeontologist from the interdisciplinary Warsaw Mummy Project and from the Department of Oncology at the Medical University of Warsaw.
Professor Rafał Stec from the Department of Oncology at the Medical University of Warsaw said: “Firstly, we have unusual changes in the nasopharyngeal bones, which, according to the mummy experts, are not typical of the mummification process.
“Secondly, the opinions of radiologists based on computed tomography indicate the possibility of tumour changes in the bones.”
He added that the young age of the deceased and the lack of another cause of death indicate an ‘oncological cause’ with a high probability.
“For now a malignant tumour is suspected, and the only certain diagnosis is possible after a histopathological examination, which would give a 100 per cent certainty,” he said.
The mummy researchers now plan to collect tissue samples and compare them with cancer samples from other Egyptian mummies stored in tissue banks in the US and the UK.
Cancer in ancient Egypt was not rare and there are several known cases of confirmed nasopharyngeal cancer.
According to the researchers, the mummy analysis can contribute to the development of modern medicine by revealing the ‘molecular signature’ of cancer that can be compared with currently occurring cancers.
Hopefully, this will also expand the knowledge of cancer evolution and may indicate further research directions in diagnostics and treatment.
Planned further research will determine the cause of the disease – whether it was associated with virus infection, e.g. HPV, or had a genetic background.
Professor Tomasz Stokłosa from the Department of Cancer Biology and Genetics of the Medical University of Warsaw will perform a genetic analysis of the collected tissues. The research will take several months, and the results may be available at the end of this year.
In addition to Marzena Ożarek-Szilke and Professor Rafał Stec, the researchers involved in the interdisciplinary Warsaw Mummy Project Human also include Dr Wojciech Ejsmond from the Institute of Mediterranean and Oriental Cultures of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Dr Chantal Milani, Stanisław Szilke and Marcin Jaworski from Warsaw Mummy Project Human
The mummy was brought to Poland in 1826 or 1827 by Jan Wężyk-Rudzki.
A recent study determined that it was a mummy of a woman.
In 2021, the researchers reported that the mummified woman had been pregnant.
Since 1917, the mummy, belonging to the University of Warsaw, has been loaned to the National Museum in Warsaw. It is displayed together with the sarcophagus at the permanent exhibition of the Ancient Art Gallery.