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Jul 25, 2023Cancer: Common to Rare Types, Signs, Causes, Treatment
With cancer, abnormal cells grow out of control. These cells were damaged and don't go through the typical steps of dividing in an orderly manner. Instead, they may multiply out of control and sometimes clump together, forming tumors.
Abnormal cancerous cells can spread (metastasize) elsewhere in the body, where they can develop into new tumors. While you can feel many cancerous tumors that form masses, you can't detect all cancers by touch. Cancer of the blood, for example, is not solid. Also, not all solid masses are cancerous. Some tumors are benign (noncancerous) and do not spread or invade nearby tissue.
More than 200 different types of cancer have been identified. Each is classified by where it starts in the body (such as the brain, bone, blood, or skin) or the type of tissue or cells from which it develops.
Here you'll learn what can cause cancer and what factors can put you at risk, how cancer progresses, the most common types, how symptoms vary by type, what tests are used for diagnosis, various treatments, and more.
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The genes inside a cell control cell growth. They make proteins that instruct cells how to function. But if genes become altered (mutate), this process is put in jeopardy. Some of these changes may allow the cells to grow out of control.
Genes are constantly being damaged. In many cases, cells can repair this damage. However, if there is too much damage, such repair may not be possible. The cells may begin to grow out of control. What's more, once these cells begin to grow fast, they're prone to picking up more mutations, and the chance of repair begins to wane.
Risk factors are things that make it more likely that a mutation will occur. These can come from within the cell or from outside it. Here are some risk factors to be aware of:
In some cases, such as if you have skin cancer, you may notice a sore that doesn't heal or that oozes, a shiny bump, or a pigmented lesion with uneven borders. By the time you see such signs, the cancer has likely been brewing for a while.
How does this process get going? You have trillions of cells in your body, and cancer can start in any one of them. The difference between cancer cells and noncancerous cells is that normal, healthy cells only grow when they are instructed to, but cancerous ones ignore some signals, such as ones that tell them to stop growing or to die (apoptosis) if they are no longer healthy.
But if genes become damaged, cancerous cells don't follow the normal rules. While the immune system can sometimes get rid of the damaged genes, in some cases, the flawed cells are able to evade this, and the cancerous cells can grow and form tumors.
From there, a cancerous cell may break away and spread through the blood or the lymph system to other parts of the body. It may leave the vessels and settle into a new site, causing more tumors to grow. The process may then repeat itself.
While cancer can, unfortunately, strike any part of the body, some areas are more vulnerable than others. Nonmelanoma skin cancer (primarily basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma) is the most common type of cancer. These cancers are less likely to invade other tissues or result in death.
The estimated number of other U.S. cancer diagnoses for 2023, from most diagnosed down, were:
In the United States, lung cancer is responsible for the highest number of deaths, followed by colon and rectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, breast cancer, and other tumors.
The symptoms you experience due to cancer will likely vary depending on where in the body it occurs. Common symptoms of cancer include the following:
Tests will be required to make a diagnosis. Here are some of the methods that may be needed:
Depending on the type of cancer, your oncologist will design a treatment plan specifically for you, which may include one of the following or a combination of approaches.
With chemotherapy, drugs are used to kill cancer cells. The medication is transported by the bloodstream throughout the body. In addition to shrinking and killing tumors, chemotherapy can, unfortunately, damage some healthy cells as well.
Chemotherapy can be used as a first-line treatment to try to cure the cancer, or it may be used to shrink tumors before giving other treatments. It can also be used after treatments such as surgery or radiation to try to clean up any lingering cancer cells.
This approach uses high doses of radiation from X-rays, electron beams, or gamma rays that create tiny breaks in DNA and, in turn, work to shrink or destroy cancer cells. The radiation is aimed locally at the area affected by the cancer and does not travel throughout the body.
Radiation therapy is given to over half of those with cancer. It sometimes is the only treatment or it can be combined with other approaches, such as chemotherapy. It can be given on its own, to shrink tumors before surgery, or to mop up lingering cells after surgery.
Surgery is a staple of cancer treatment for many. It can be used on its own to treat cancer or with other approaches. Whether you will be a candidate for surgery depends on the type of cancer you have, where it is located, how large a tumor it is, and the general state of your health.
Surgery can only be used for solid tumors and not for something like leukemia, where cells are dispersed throughout the body. Likewise, if the cancer has metastasized (spread to distant areas of the body) already, surgery may not be the recommended approach. Instead, your oncologist will likely recommend a systemwide treatment.
Using targeted therapy, oncologists can lock in on cancer cells themselves by targeting proteins associated with cancer cell growth and how these cells divide.
With this precision approach, they may use monoclonal antibodies that attach to proteins on cancer cells, flagging these to make them more easily detected by the immune system, which can then destroy them. Or, these antibodies may be paired with toxins, which kill cancer once they are delivered to the site.
Other targeted approaches may include preventing blood vessels needed for tumor growth from attaching to a mass of cancer cells. Or, these treatments may interfere with signals that allow cancer cells to divide and grow.
With immunotherapy, also known as biological therapy, the body's own immune system is used to fight cancer. The idea is to enhance the way the immune system works so that cancer cells can't evade it any longer.
There are several strategies that can be used, such as:
The idea of complementary and alternative medicine is to augment standard therapy. This can range from helping to ease stress to working to relieve treatment side effects. Approaches here can include the following:
Palliative care is meant to improve the quality of life rather than cure a condition. It aims to lessen symptoms and side effects that may arise from the cancer itself or from a treatment. It may range from managing physical problems such as nausea and shortness of breath to emotional and spiritual ones.
Determining what stage your cancer has progressed to is pivotal in fighting this condition. It helps your oncologist to determine the best treatment for you and whether you are eligible for upcoming clinical trials that are studying new approaches.
Your oncologist may describe your cancer in the following ways:
They may also use more specific staging terminology. The "TNM" system stands for "tumor," "node," and "metastasis," as follows:
Staging ranges from 1 to 4 and general includes the following information:
As staging definitions may be different for the type of cancer you have, your oncologist can explain in detail what the stage of cancer means for your treatment plan and prognosis.
Cancer can occur in any person, even when you have tried to eliminate risk factors that are under your control.
Healthy life choices may lower the risk of developing some types of cancer. These include healthy eating, avoiding smoking, wearing sunscreen, keeping alcohol consumption to a minimum, and taking other protective steps, such as HPV vaccination.
Detecting cancer early with the aid of regular screening tests for breast cancer, cervical cancer, colorectal cancer, lung cancer, and prostate cancer can improve treatment outcomes. See a healthcare provider regularly to ensure you get appropriate screenings and have any early symptoms of cancer addressed.
To find the right cancer specialist, you may start by talking to your primary care healthcare provider and asking for suggestions.
Another possibility is to search the American Society for Clinical Oncology database. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services provides a search tool for an oncologist who takes Medicare.
No two cases of cancer are necessarily alike. Some types of cancer have a favorable outlook, especially when caught at an early stage.
The outlook in your particular case will depend on the type of cancer you have been diagnosed with its stage, and the type of treatment available. Other factors that influence prognosis include the following:
If you are looking for support, the American Cancer Society has a helpline (800-227-2345) and online chat to connect to an information specialist who can help answer your questions.
Other support services you can search for on the American Cancer Society website include:
People seeking a caregiver can contact a home healthcare agency that will provide a screened and supervised caregiver. To find such an agency near you, use this home health agency locator. While it is a Medicare-related service, you do not have to be a part of the program to use this locater.
Cancer starts on the cellular level, with genetic changes allowing a cancerous cell to multiply out of control. Symptoms arise as cancer growth begins to affect the tissues and organs in which it starts. It may eventually spread elsewhere in the body.
The symptoms you experience will be unique to you and the type of cancer you have. Likewise, your oncologist will design a treatment plan just for you. How you fare will depend on the specifics of your cancer, how aggressive it is, the available treatment options, and your unique makeup.
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Cancer Research UK. Types of cancer.
National Cancer Institute. How genetic changes lead to cancer.
Cancer Research UK. Together we will beat cancer.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Risk factors and cancer.
Skin Cancer Foundation. What does skin cancer look like?
American Cancer Society. Key statistics for basal and squamous cell skin cancers.
National Cancer Institute. Common cancer types.
National Cancer Institute. Common stat facts: Common cancer sites.
Cancer Research UK. Signs and symptoms of cancer.
Stanford Medicine. How is cancer diagnosed?
National Cancer Institute. Chemotherapy to treat cancer.
American Cancer Society. How radiation is used to treat cancer.
Cancer Research UK. What is cancer surgery?
National Cancer Institute. Targeted therapy to treat cancer.
National Cancer Institute. Immunotherapy to treat cancer.
National Cancer Institute. Complementary and alternative medicine.
National Cancer Institute. Palliative care in cancer.
National Cancer Institute: Cancer staging.
Cancer Research UK. What cancer staging is.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. How to prevent cancer or find it early.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cancer screening tests.
American Society of Clinical Oncology. Choosing a doctor for your cancer care.
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American Cancer Society. ACS patient programs and services.
American Society of Clinical Oncology. How to find a caregiver when you have cancer.
By Maxine LipnerMaxine Lipner is a long-time health and medical writer with over 30 years of experience covering ophthalmology, oncology, and general health and wellness.
FatigueMysterious bruising or bleeding Drenching night sweatsLosing weight unexpectedly Finding a lumpFeeling painImmune checkpoint inhibitorsImmune system modulators Monoclonal antibodiesCancer vaccinesIn situLocalizedRegionalDistantTNMStage 1Stage 2 Stage 3Stage 4 (800-227-2345)