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Cancer Prevention Overview (PDQ®)
Patient VersionHealth Professional VersionLast Modified: 08/31/2009



What is Prevention?







Carcinogenesis






Risk Factors






Interventions That are Known to Lower Cancer Risk






Interventions That Are Not Known to Lower Cancer Risk






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Changes to This Summary (08/31/2009)






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Carcinogenesis

Key Points for This Section


Carcinogenesis is the process in which normal cells turn into cancer cells.

Carcinogenesis is the series of steps that take place as a normal cell becomes a cancer cell. Cells are the smallest units of the body and they make up the body’s tissues. Each cell contains genes that guide the way the body grows, develops, and repairs itself. There are many genes that control whether a cell lives or dies, divides (multiplies), or takes on special functions, such as becoming a nerve cell or a muscle cell.

Changes (mutations) in genes occur during carcinogenesis.

Changes (mutations) in genes can cause normal controls in cells to break down. When this happens, cells do not die when they should and new cells are produced when the body does not need them. The buildup of extra cells may cause a mass (tumor) to form.

Tumors can be benign or malignant (cancerous). Malignant tumor cells invade nearby tissues and spread to other parts of the body. Benign tumor cells do not invade nearby tissues or spread.

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