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Cancer develops when cells in a part of the body
begin to grow out of control. Although there are many kinds of cancer, they
all start because of out-of-control growth of abnormal cells. Normal body cells grow, divide, and die in an
orderly fashion. During the early years of a person's life, normal cells
divide more rapidly until the person becomes an adult. After that, cells in most
parts of the body divide only to replace worn-out or dying cells and to
repair injuries. Because cancer cells continue to grow and divide,
they are different from normal cells. Instead of dying, they outlive normal
cells and continue to form new abnormal cells. Cancer cells often travel to other parts of the
body where they begin to grow and replace normal tissue. This process, called
metastasis, occurs as the cancer cells get into the bloodstream or
lymph vessels of our body. When cells from a cancer like breast cancer spread
to another organ like the liver, the cancer is still called breast cancer,
not liver cancer. Cancer cells develop because of damage to DNA. This
substance is in every cell and directs all its activities. Most of the time when
DNA becomes damaged the body is able to repair it. In cancer cells, the
damaged DNA is not repaired. People can inherit damaged DNA, which accounts
for inherited cancers. Many times though, a person’s DNA becomes damaged by
exposure to something in the environment, like smoking. Cancer usually forms as a tumor. Some cancers, like
leukemia, do not form tumors. Instead, these cancer cells involve the blood
and blood-forming organs, and circulate through other tissues where they
grow. Not all tumors are cancerous. Benign
(noncancerous) tumors do not spread to other parts of the body (metastasize)
and, with very rare exceptions, are not life-threatening. Different types of cancer can behave very
differently. For example, lung cancer and breast cancer are very different
diseases. They grow at different rates and respond to different treatments.
That is why people with cancer need treatment that is aimed at their
particular kind cancer. Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the Revised |
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