The body is made up of
hundreds of millions of living cells. Normal body cells grow, divide,
and die in an orderly fashion. During the early years of a person's
life, normal cells divide faster to allow the person to grow. After the
person becomes an adult, most cells divide only to replace worn-out or
dying cells or to repair injuries.
Cancer
begins when cells in a part of the body start to grow out of control.
There are many kinds of cancer, but they all start because of
out-of-control growth of abnormal cells.
Cancer
cell growth is different from normal cell growth. Instead of dying,
cancer cells continue to grow and form new, abnormal cells. Cancer cells
can also invade (grow into) other tissues, something that normal cells
cannot do. Growing out of control and invading other tissues are what
makes a cell a cancer cell.
Cells
become cancer cells because of damage to DNA. DNA is in every cell and
directs all its actions. In a normal cell, when DNA gets damaged the
cell either repairs the damage or the cell dies. In cancer cells, the
damaged DNA is not repaired, but the cell doesn't die like it should.
Instead, this cell goes on making new cells that the body does not need.
These new cells will all have the same damaged DNA as the first cell
does.
People can inherit damaged DNA, but the most DNA damage is caused by mistakes that happen while the normal cell is reproducing or by something in our environment. Sometimes the cause of the DNA damage is something obvious, like cigarette smoking. But often no clear cause is found.
People can inherit damaged DNA, but the most DNA damage is caused by mistakes that happen while the normal cell is reproducing or by something in our environment. Sometimes the cause of the DNA damage is something obvious, like cigarette smoking. But often no clear cause is found.
In
most cases the cancer cells form a tumor. Some cancers, like leukemia,
rarely form tumors. Instead, these cancer cells involve the blood and
blood-forming organs and circulate through other tissues where they
grow.
Cancer
cells often travel to other parts of the body, where they begin to grow
and form new tumors that replace normal tissue. This process is called
metastasis. It happens when the cancer cells get into the bloodstream or
lymph vessels of our body.
No
matter where a cancer may spread, it is always named for the place
where it started. For example, breast cancer that has spread to the
liver is still called breast cancer, not liver cancer. Likewise,
prostate cancer that has spread to the bone is metastasis prostate
cancer, not bone cancer.
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 of cancer.
Not
all tumors are cancerous. Tumors that aren't cancer are called benign.
Benign tumors can cause problems -- they can grow very large and press
on healthy organs and tissues. But they cannot grow into (invade)
other tissues. Because they can't invade, they also can't spread to other
parts of the body (metastasize). These tumors are almost never life
threatening.
What is Cancer? |