Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Current
    • Published Ahead of Print
    • Archive
    • Supplemental Issues
    • Collections - French
    • Collections - English
  • Info for
    • Authors & Reviewers
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Advertisers
    • Careers & Locums
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
  • About CFP
    • About CFP
    • About the CFPC
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
  • Feedback
    • Feedback
    • Rapid Responses
    • Most Read
    • Most Cited
    • Email Alerts
  • Blogs
    • Latest Blogs
    • Blog Guidelines
    • Directives pour les blogues
  • Mainpro+ Credits
    • About Mainpro+
    • Member Login
    • Instructions
  • Other Publications
    • http://www.cfpc.ca/Canadianfamilyphysician/
    • https://www.cfpc.ca/Login/
    • Careers and Locums

User menu

  • My alerts

Search

  • Advanced search
The College of Family Physicians of Canada
  • Other Publications
    • http://www.cfpc.ca/Canadianfamilyphysician/
    • https://www.cfpc.ca/Login/
    • Careers and Locums
  • My alerts
The College of Family Physicians of Canada

Advanced Search

  • Home
  • Articles
    • Current
    • Published Ahead of Print
    • Archive
    • Supplemental Issues
    • Collections - French
    • Collections - English
  • Info for
    • Authors & Reviewers
    • Submit a Manuscript
    • Advertisers
    • Careers & Locums
    • Subscribers
    • Permissions
  • About CFP
    • About CFP
    • About the CFPC
    • Editorial Advisory Board
    • Terms of Use
    • Contact Us
  • Feedback
    • Feedback
    • Rapid Responses
    • Most Read
    • Most Cited
    • Email Alerts
  • Blogs
    • Latest Blogs
    • Blog Guidelines
    • Directives pour les blogues
  • Mainpro+ Credits
    • About Mainpro+
    • Member Login
    • Instructions
  • RSS feeds
  • Follow cfp Template on Twitter
Research ArticleClinical Review

Evolutionary medicine

Update on the relevance to family practice

Christopher T. Naugler
Canadian Family Physician September 2008, 54 (9) 1265-1269;
Christopher T. Naugler
  • Find this author on Google Scholar
  • Find this author on PubMed
  • Search for this author on this site
  • Article
  • Figures & Data
  • eLetters
  • Info & Metrics
  • PDF
Loading

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE To review the relevance of evolutionary medicine to family practice and family physician training.

QUALITY OF EVIDENCE Articles were located through a MEDLINE search, using the key words evolution, Darwin, and adaptation. Most references presented level III evidence (expert opinion), while a minority provided level II evidence (epidemiologic studies).

MAIN MESSAGE Evolutionary medicine deals with the interplay of biology and the environment in the understanding of human disease. Yet medical schools have virtually ignored the need for family physicians to have more than a cursory knowledge of this topic. A review of the main trends in this field most relevant to family practice revealed that a basic knowledge of evolutionary medicine might help in explaining the causation of diseases to patients. Evolutionary medicine has also proven key to explaining the reasons for the development of antibiotic resistance and has the potential to explain cancer pathogenesis. As an organizing principle, this field also has potential in the teaching of family medicine.

CONCLUSION Evolutionary medicine should be studied further and incorporated into medical training and practice. Its practical utility will be proven through the generation of testable hypotheses and their application in relation to disease causation and possible prevention.

Evolutionary medicine (also called Darwinian medicine) refers to the application of the principles of natural selection to the understanding and treatment of disease. The publication of several books on evolutionary medicine aimed at least in part at popular audiences1–6 has made a basic understanding of this discipline important for family physicians. Physicians, however, are in general poorly prepared to evaluate literature on evolutionary medicine, possibly in part because of a lack of exposure to evolutionary medicine during training. In addition, there is little guidance available to assist family physicians in navigating this literature.

The purpose of this paper is to selectively review the main trends in evolutionary medicine research, emphasizing how these apply to the practice of family medicine.

Quality of evidence

I searched for relevant articles through MEDLINE, using the key words evolution, Darwin, and adaptation. Additional articles were found by reviewing the citations of retrieved papers. From these, I selected articles that discussed the clinical relevance of evolutionary medicine or that argued a particular evolutionary explanation for a disease as being necessary for the overall understanding of that disease. Review papers were excluded unless they offered original arguments for the clinical relevance of evolutionary medicine. The studies I examined logically fell into 3 different categories: articles offering explanations for the existence of specific diseases; articles arguing that evolutionary medicine offers a conceptual framework for medical education; and articles discussing the utility of evolutionary medicine for disease treatment and prevention. For each of these broad categories, I summarized the main arguments relevant to the practice of family medicine. Most papers presented level III evidence (expert opinion). Several papers presented level II evidence (epidemiologic research).

Evolutionary explanations for diseases

There are several recurring evolutionary explanations for disease. The 3 most common of these are reviewed here with representative examples. A more complete list of diseases and proposed evolutionary explanations is given in Table 1.7–20

View this table:
  • View inline
  • View popup
Table 1

Examples of evolutionary explanations for human disorders

One of the most common evolutionary explanations for disease involves a phenomenon known as heterozygote advantage. In diseases caused by heterozygote advantage, certain alleles appear to represent an adaptation in carriers (heterozygotes) but are clearly deleterious in homozygotes. The classic example of this is sickle cell anemia and protection from severe malarial infections. Individuals heterozygous for the HbAS allele (ie, sickle cell trait) demonstrate enhanced phagocytosis of red blood cells infected with the ring form of malaria parasites (particularly Plasmodium falciparum).7 In fact, carriers of the sickle cell trait enjoy a greater than 90% protection against severe malaria.21 Because infection with P falciparum can be fatal, natural selection has favoured maintenance of the HbAS allele in malaria-endemic areas of Africa despite the clear disadvantage to individuals homozygous for HbAS, who contract sickle cell disease. Many other human red blood cell polymorphisms also appear to be adaptations against malarial infection (eg, glucose-6–phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, pyruvate kinase deficiency, α-thalassemia, hemoglobin C disease, hemoglobin E disease).22

Another common evolutionary hypothesis for the origin of human diseases focuses on mismatches between genes and the environment. The basis of this idea is that at some period in the past, human genes adapted to a particular ancestral environment (such as the African savanna). Over time, our physical and cultural environments changed faster than natural selection altered our allele frequencies, resulting in modern-day diseases. Numerous diseases are posited to result from such gene-environment mismatches, including diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and hemochromatosis. For example, the common gene mutation C282Y observed in hemochromatosis might have arisen from an adaptation that occurred when prehistoric humans switched from a Paleolithic hunter-gatherer diet rich in red meat to a Neolithic cereal grain diet relatively low in red meat, resulting in iron deficiency anemia.10 Because both homozygous and heterozygous carriers of the hemochromatosis C282Y mutation have greater iron stores, this mutation likely provided a fitness advantage in a Neolithic environment, especially to women of child-bearing age. The mutation probably only manifested as disease (became disadvantageous) when nutritional intakes improved in recent centuries.

Evolutionary medicine might also have wide-ranging applications in psychiatry.23,24 For example, it has been postulated that anxiety stems from a mismatch between modern cultural conditions and emotional responses that developed in response to historic (eg, Paleolithic) cultural conditions. This line of reasoning has led to suggestions of preventing the development of anxiety by altering early life experiences in children.25 However, it must be pointed out that these suggestions remain highly speculative. Among the chief proponents of evolutionary psychiatry is Randolph Nesse. In a 2000 review of evolutionary explanations for depression, Nesse concluded that in some instances depressive states might be adaptive because they “inhibit dangerous or wasteful actions” in situations that would likely prove futile to the individual.26

A third common evolutionary hypothesis for human disease involves a concept known as antagonistic pleiotropy. Pleiotropy refers to instances where a single gene affects 2 or more traits. Antagonistic pleiotropy occurs when one of these traits is advantageous to the organism but the other trait, coded by the same gene, is deleterious. This concept has been central to evolutionary arguments about aging for the last half century.27 The idea is that alleles that increase reproductive success early in life might also contribute to accelerated aging later in life. Therefore, aging can be considered a trade-off for reproductive success. As natural selection operates through the differential passage of alleles to future generations, it is easy to see how increased reproductive success early in life will be selected, even if it also confers a negative effect (aging) after the reproductive period has passed.

Unifying concept in family medicine education

Thirty-five years ago, the biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky argued the following:

Seen in the light of evolution, biology is, perhaps, intellectually the most satisfying and inspiring science. Without that light it becomes a pile of sundry facts some of them interesting or curious but making no meaningful picture as a whole.28

An analogous argument has been made regarding the study of medicine, with one author writing, “The study of medicine often strikes students as an unsystematic conglomeration of information and skills—relevant to medicine, but gathered from a wide variety of domains without any linking theoretical rational.”29 It has been argued that evolutionary medicine could provide just such a key organizing principle for medical school education.29–32 This argument also appears to apply to teaching family medicine, where students are presented with a bewildering array of facts and concepts from widely disparate fields.

Despite the fact that proposals for the inclusion of evolutionary medicine in medical school curricula have been made for more than a decade,29,31–33 most medical schools have largely or completely ignored this aspect of biologic theory. Nesse and Schiffman conducted a mail survey of all North American medical schools and found that only 48% of responding schools considered evolutionary medicine to be important knowledge for physicians; only 4% had a dedicated course or lecture sequence in evolutionary biology. Among survey respondents, the 2 most important reasons for not teaching evolutionary medicine were that there was not enough curriculum time and that there was a lack of faculty expertise. Concerns about political controversy were cited by 11% of medical schools.31 While not explicitly addressed in this survey, the risk of misusing evolutionary medicine to naturalize social inequalities could also be raised as a possible concern. A detailed discussion of this is beyond the scope of this review, but interested readers are referred to the recent series of essays by Lewontin and Lewis.34

To date, there has been little published experience on the teaching of evolutionary medicine in medical schools. An exception is the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, where an evolutionary medicine course was successfully integrated into the curriculum. Students at that school rated the evolutionary medicine course as a highly valuable experience.33 In an even broader sense, because evolutionary medicine places humanity within the larger ecosystem of the earth and draws attention to the dangers inherent in overpopulation and climate change, its inclusion in family medicine curricula might result in increased awareness of these issues among trainees. To my knowledge, however, there are no published data on the effects of incorporating evolutionary medicine into family medicine training programs.

Generating new ideas for treatment and prevention

One of the most fruitful applications of evolutionary medicine has been in the study of antibiotic resistance and pathogen virulence.31 It is now clear that bacteria rapidly evolve resistance to antibiotics.35 Genes that confer antibiotic resistance might arise from new mutations or might be acquired by horizontal gene transfer from other species or strains of bacteria. Once these genes are present in a population of bacteria, exposure to an antibiotic will result in differential survival of individual bacteria possessing the antibiotic-resistance genes. The molecular basis of this evolution has been particularly well studied in Staphylococcus aureus36 and can help to explain the emergence of drug-resistant strains in different parts of the world. Of particular importance are studies of the evolution of pathogen virulence37 and the implications of this for emerging epizootic diseases that threaten human populations. The inappropriate use of antibiotics has been implicated as an important factor in the evolution of antibiotic resistance38–40;this is one area where evolutionary medicine has direct relevance to family medicine, as it provides a compelling biological argument for the restrained prescription of antibiotics.

Evolutionary biology has also been influential in the study of oncology, where cancers have been described as “microcosms of evolution.”41 The fundamental idea is that individual cancer cells behave in a fashion analogous to individual organisms and therefore are subject to competition with other cells, from natural selection of cells with survival advantages to predation by the immune system. An understanding of these processes will lead to more effective predictions of the behaviour of tumours as well as potentially more effective treatments.41 This research has not progressed to the point where it is directly applicable to clinical family practice. A basic familiarity with this topic, however, could prove useful as family physicians play an increasingly important role in community cancer treatment.

Conclusion

Although medical schools and physicians have generally been slow to recognize the usefulness of evolutionary medicine, there is increasing public awareness of this area. As the discipline of evolutionary medicine becomes better organized and better integrated into other fields of medicine, its practical utility will be examined in part through the generation of more testable hypotheses, particularly in the areas of disease treatment and prevention. For example, a knowledge of evolutionary medicine could be used to design health promotion programs, especially for diseases that represent adaptations to ancestral environments.42 It is important that family physicians be aware of this growing field and of its potential applications to the practice of family medicine.

Notes

EDITOR’S KEY POINTS

  • The purpose of this paper was to selectively review the main trends in evolutionary medicine research.

  • The studies fell into 3 different categories: articles offering explanations for the evolutionary existence of specific diseases; articles arguing that evolutionary medicine offers a conceptual framework for medical education; and articles discussing the utility of evolutionary medicine for disease treatment and prevention.

  • It is becoming increasingly important that family physicians be aware of this growing field and its potential applications to the practice of family medicine.

POINTS DE REPÈRE DU RÉDACTEUR

  • Cet article avait pour but de faire le point sur les principales tendances de la recherche sur la médecine évolutionniste.

  • Trois types d’études ont été retenues: celles qui offrent des explications sur la nature évolutionniste de maladies spécifiques; les article qui suggèrent que la médecine évolutionniste offre un cadre conceptuel pour la formation médicale; et ceux qui discutent de l’utilité de la médecine évolutionniste pour le traitement et la prévention des maladies.

  • Le médecin de famille devra de plus en plus tenir compte de ce domaine en croissance et de ses applications potentielles dans la pratique de la médecine familiale.

Footnotes

  • This article has been peer reviewed.

  • Cet article a fait l’objet d’une révision par des pairs.

  • Competing interests

    None declared

  • Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada

References

  1. ↵
    GreavesMFCancer: the evolutionary legacyOxford, UKOxford University Press2000
  2. NesseRMWilliamsGCWhy we get sick: the new science of Darwinian medicine.New York, NYVintage Books1994
    1. Trevathan WR,
    2. Smith EO,
    3. McKenna JJ
    , editors. Evolutionary medicineOxford, UKOxford University Press1999
  3. EwaldPWEvolution of infectious disease.Oxford, UKOxford University Press1994
  4. MoalemSSurvival of the sickest: a medical maverick discovers why we need diseaseToronto, ONHarper Collins Canada2007
  5. ↵
    PollanMThe omnivore’s dilemma: a natural history of four meals.New York, NYThe Penguin Group2006
  6. ↵
    AyiKTurriniFPigaAAresePEnhanced phagocytosis of ring-parasitized mutant erythrocytes: a common mechanism that may explain protection against falciparum malaria in sickle trait and beta-thalassemia traitBlood200410410336471
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  7. ↵
    RotterJIDiamondJMWhat maintains the frequencies of human genetic diseases?Nature1987329613728990
    OpenUrlPubMed
  8. ↵
    WoolfLIMcBeanMSWoolfFMCahalaneSFPhenylketonuria as a balanced polymorphism: the nature of the heterozygote advantageAnn Hum Genet19753844619
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  9. ↵
    1. Naugler CT
    Hemochromatosis: a Neolithic adaptation to cereal grain dietsMed Hypotheses20087036912. Epub 2007Aug8
    OpenUrlPubMed
  10. ↵
    MoalemSPercyMEKruckTPGelbartRREpidemic pathogenic selection: an explanation for hereditary hemochromatosis?Med Hypotheses20025933259
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  11. ↵
    AmesBNCathcartRSchwiersEHochsteinPUric acid provides an antioxidant defense in humans against oxidant-and radical-caused aging and cancer: a hypothesisProc Natl Acad Sci U S A19817811685862
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  12. ↵
    WickGPerschinkaHMillonigGAtherosclerosis is an autoimmune disease: an updateTrends Immunol200122126659
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  13. ↵
    WickGJansen-DürrPBergerPBlaskoIGrubeck-LoebensteinBDiseases of agingVaccine20001816156783
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  14. ↵
    WickGBergerPJansen-DürrPGrubeck-LoebensteinBA Darwinian-evolutionary concept of age-related diseasesExp Gerontol2003381–21325
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  15. ↵
    EatonSBKonnerMPaleolithic nutrition: a consideration of its nature and current implicationsN Eng J Med198531252839
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  16. ↵
    NeelJVWederABJuliusSType II diabetes, essential hypertension, and obesity as “syndromes of impaired genetic homeostasis”: the “thrifty genotype” hypothesis enters the 21st centuryPerspect Biol Med19984214474
    OpenUrlPubMed
  17. ↵
    NeelJVDiabetes mellitus: a “thrifty” genotype rendered detrimental by “progress”?Am J Hum Genet19621435362
    OpenUrlPubMed
  18. ↵
    NesseRMBerridgeKCPsychoactive drug use in evolutionary perspectiveScience19972785335636
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  19. ↵
    EatonSBPikeMCShortRVLeeNCTrussellJHatcherRAWomen’s reproductive cancers in evolutionary contextQ Rev Biol199469335367
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  20. ↵
    WilliamsTNMwangiTWWambuaSAlexanderNDKortokMSnowRWSickle cell trait and the risk of Plasmodium falciparum malaria and other childhood diseasesJ Infect Dis2005192117886
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  21. ↵
    1. Williams TN
    Human red blood cell polymorphisms and malariaCurr Opin Microbiol20069438894. Epub 2006Jul3
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  22. ↵
    1. Baptista T,
    2. Aldana E,
    3. Angeles F,
    4. Beaulieu S
    Evolution theory: an overview of its applications in psychiatryPsychopathology20084111727. Epub 2007Oct18
    OpenUrlPubMed
  23. ↵
    1. Stein DJ
    Evolutionary theory, psychiatry, and psychopharmacologyProg Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry200630576673. Epub 2006 Mar 31.
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  24. ↵
    GrindeBAn approach to the prevention of anxiety-related disorders based on evolutionary medicinePrev Med20054069049
    OpenUrlPubMed
  25. ↵
    NesseRMIs depression an adaptation?Arch Gen Psychiatry20005711420
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  26. ↵
    WilliamsGCPleiotropy, natural selection, and the evolution of senescenceEvolution1957114398411
    OpenUrlCrossRef
  27. ↵
    DobzhanskyTNothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolutionAm Biol Teach19733531259
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  28. ↵
    CharltonBGA syllabus for evolutionary medicineJ R Soc Med19979073979
    OpenUrlFREE Full Text
  29. WeinerHNotes on an evolutionary medicinePsychosom Med199860451020
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  30. ↵
    NesseRMSchiffmanJDEvolutionary biology in the medical school curriculumBioScience20035365857
    OpenUrlCrossRef
  31. ↵
    ShanksNPylesRAEvolution and medicine: the long reach of “Dr. DarwinPhilos Ethics Humanit Med200724
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  32. ↵
    AbbotAAbboudGEvolutionary medicine: a model for medical school introductionMed Educ20064054712
    OpenUrlPubMed
  33. ↵
    LewontinRCLewisRBiology under the influence: dialectical essays on ecology, agriculture and health.New York, NYMonthly Review Press2007
  34. ↵
    StearnsSCEbertDEvolution in health and disease: work in progressQ Rev Biol200176441732
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  35. ↵
    DeurenbergRHVinkCKalenicSFriedrichAWBruggemanCAStobberinghEEThe molecular evolution of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.Clin Microbiol Infect200713322235
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  36. ↵
    Wickham ME, Brown NF, Boyle EC, Coombes BK, Finlay BB. Virulence is positively selected by transmission success between mammalian hosts. Curr Biol 2007;17(9):783–8. Epub 2007 Apr 19.
  37. ↵
    HartAMPepperGAGonzalesRBalancing acts: deciding for or against antibiotics in acute respiratory infectionsJ Fam Pract20065543205
    OpenUrlPubMed
  38. CohenRApproaches to reduce antibiotic resistance in the communityPediatr Infect Dis J2006251097780
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  39. ↵
    CadieuxGTamblynRDauphineeDLibmanMPredictors of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing among primary care physiciansCMAJ2007177887783
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
  40. ↵
    GreavesMCancer causation: the Darwinian downside of past success?Lancet Oncol20023424451
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
  41. ↵
    EatonSBStrassmanBINesseRMNeelJVEwaldPWWilliamsGCEvolutionary health promotionPrev Med200234210918
    OpenUrlCrossRefPubMed
PreviousNext
Back to top

In this issue

Canadian Family Physician: 54 (9)
Canadian Family Physician
Vol. 54, Issue 9
1 Sep 2008
  • Table of Contents
  • About the Cover
  • Index by author
Print
Download PDF
Article Alerts
Sign In to Email Alerts with your Email Address
Email Article

Thank you for your interest in spreading the word on The College of Family Physicians of Canada.

NOTE: We only request your email address so that the person you are recommending the page to knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not capture any email address.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
Evolutionary medicine
(Your Name) has sent you a message from The College of Family Physicians of Canada
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the The College of Family Physicians of Canada web site.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Citation Tools
Evolutionary medicine
Christopher T. Naugler
Canadian Family Physician Sep 2008, 54 (9) 1265-1269;

Citation Manager Formats

  • BibTeX
  • Bookends
  • EasyBib
  • EndNote (tagged)
  • EndNote 8 (xml)
  • Medlars
  • Mendeley
  • Papers
  • RefWorks Tagged
  • Ref Manager
  • RIS
  • Zotero
Respond to this article
Share
Evolutionary medicine
Christopher T. Naugler
Canadian Family Physician Sep 2008, 54 (9) 1265-1269;
Reddit logo Twitter logo Facebook logo Mendeley logo
  • Tweet Widget
  • Facebook Like
  • Google Plus One

Jump to section

  • Article
    • ABSTRACT
    • Quality of evidence
    • Evolutionary explanations for diseases
    • Unifying concept in family medicine education
    • Generating new ideas for treatment and prevention
    • Conclusion
    • Notes
    • Footnotes
    • References
  • Figures & Data
  • Info & Metrics
  • eLetters
  • PDF

Related Articles

  • More clinical care: survey
  • PubMed
  • Google Scholar

Cited By...

  • The genome, microbiome and evolutionary medicine
  • Google Scholar

More in this TOC Section

  • Parkinson disease primer, part 2: management of motor and nonmotor symptoms
  • Parkinson disease primer, part 1: diagnosis
  • Prescribing for common complications of spinal cord injury
Show more Clinical Review

Similar Articles

Navigate

  • Home
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
  • Collections - English
  • Collections - Française

For Authors

  • Authors and Reviewers
  • Submit a Manuscript
  • Permissions
  • Terms of Use

General Information

  • About CFP
  • About the CFPC
  • Advertisers
  • Careers & Locums
  • Editorial Advisory Board
  • Subscribers

Journal Services

  • Email Alerts
  • Twitter
  • RSS Feeds

Copyright © 2023 by The College of Family Physicians of Canada

Powered by HighWire