What Is Cancer?

Every second of every day, your body quietly manages an enormous number of cells — growing new ones, replacing old ones, and shutting down those that are damaged or no longer needed. This process runs on genetic instructions, and most of the time it works remarkably well.

📌

Cancer enters the picture when those instructions get corrupted. Certain cells stop responding to the signals that tell them when to stop multiplying, and instead they keep producing copies of themselves without restraint.

The result can be a solid mass of abnormal tissue — a tumor — or, in blood-based cancers, an unchecked flood of faulty cells that never form a lump at all.

Cancer is not one illness with one explanation. It is a broad category covering more than 100 distinct diseases, each shaped by where it originates, which genes are affected, and how aggressively it behaves. Two people with “breast cancer” may have tumors with very different biological profiles — and very different treatment paths.

Why Does Cancer Develop?

Rarely does cancer trace back to a single cause. More often, it reflects a combination of accumulated genetic damage and outside influences that accelerate that damage over time.

  • Smoking sits at the top of the list of preventable triggers — it is linked not just to lung cancer but to cancers of the mouth, throat, bladder, kidney, and more.
  • Spending years in unprotected sun or using tanning beds raises your risk of skin cancers by exposing skin cells to ultraviolet radiation that chips away at their DNA.
  • Excess body weight, a sedentary lifestyle, and heavy alcohol use are all established contributors as well.
â„šī¸

Certain infections can also set the stage for cancer.
  • The human papillomavirus is responsible for the vast majority of cervical cancers, and long-term hepatitis B or C infection significantly raises liver cancer risk.
  • Industrial and environmental exposures — asbestos, benzene, radon — have clear ties to specific cancer types.
  • And for a portion of people, the risk is built in from birth: inherited mutations in genes like BRCA1 or BRCA2 substantially raise the odds of breast, ovarian, and other cancers across a lifetime.
  • Age matters too — not because getting older causes cancer directly, but because the longer cells keep dividing, the more opportunity there is for genetic errors to accumulate.

The Most Common Cancer Types

Breast cancer ranks among the most frequently diagnosed cancers in the world. It develops in the tissue of the breast — most often in the cells lining the milk ducts — and while it is far more prevalent in women, men can develop it too. Mammography has made it possible to catch many cases before a lump is even felt, which dramatically improves outcomes.

Lung cancer accounts for more cancer deaths each year than any other type in the U.S., in both men and women. Its strong association with smoking is well established, but a meaningful number of cases occur in people who have never smoked. Early-stage lung cancer rarely produces noticeable symptoms, which is part of why it is so often found at an advanced stage.

Colorectal cancer originates in the large intestine or rectum and sits among the top three most diagnosed cancers nationally. What makes it somewhat unusual is how preventable it is — routine colonoscopies can locate and remove precancerous growths called polyps before they ever turn malignant, making screening a genuinely powerful tool.

Prostate cancer tends to grow slowly, and many men with prostate cancer live with it for years without serious consequences. Still, certain forms are aggressive and need to be treated without delay, which is why monitoring and early detection matter.

Skin cancer is the most diagnosed cancer in the United States by a wide margin. It falls into three main categories.

Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma develop in the outer layers of the skin, are closely tied to sun exposure history, and when caught early, are among the most treatable cancers there are.

Melanoma is a different story — it arises from melanocytes, the cells responsible for skin pigmentation, and has a far greater tendency to invade surrounding tissue and spread elsewhere in the body if not caught early.

âš ī¸

Important: Changes in an existing mole, or a new spot that looks unusual — asymmetrical, multi-colored, or with irregular edges — are worth getting checked promptly.

Beyond these, bladder cancer, uterine cancer, kidney cancer, thyroid cancer, pancreatic cancer, and leukemia (a cancer of blood-forming tissue) all appear with notable frequency in the general population.

What Metastatic Cancer Means

When a cancer is described as metastatic, it means the disease has moved beyond its original location.

📌

Individual cancer cells can detach from a primary tumor, slip into the bloodstream or lymphatic system, and travel to distant organs — the lungs, liver, bones, and brain are among the most common destinations, though this varies by cancer type.

Once those traveling cells settle somewhere new and begin multiplying, the resulting tumors are still classified by where the cancer started. Breast cancer that has spread to the liver is still breast cancer, not liver cancer — a distinction that matters because it determines how treatment is approached.

Metastatic cancer is harder to eliminate than localized disease, but harder does not mean untreatable. Many people with metastatic diagnoses live for extended periods with their condition managed effectively. Treatment in these cases often focuses on slowing progression, reducing symptoms, and maintaining quality of life alongside attempts to shrink or control tumors.

How Cancer Is Treated

  1. Surgery is frequently the starting point when cancer is confined to one area. Surgeons remove the tumor along with a margin of surrounding healthy tissue, and sometimes nearby lymph nodes, to determine whether the cancer has begun migrating.
  2. Radiation therapy directs high-energy beams at a tumor to damage the genetic material inside cancer cells, making it impossible for them to keep reproducing. It can be delivered through an external machine or via radioactive material implanted near the tumor site.
  3. Chemotherapy sends cancer-fighting drugs through the bloodstream to reach cells throughout the body. Because it targets any fast-dividing cell, it can affect healthy tissue as well — which explains many of its side effects. It is used before surgery to shrink tumors, after surgery to mop up remaining cells, or as the primary treatment when surgery is not viable.
  4. Immunotherapy takes a fundamentally different approach: rather than attacking cancer directly, it recalibrates your immune system so it can identify and destroy cancer cells on its own. Checkpoint inhibitors, which remove the “brakes” that tumors use to hide from immune detection, have transformed outcomes for certain cancers that once had very limited treatment options.
  5. Targeted therapy uses drugs engineered to interfere with specific molecular signals that certain cancer cells depend on to survive and grow. Because these drugs home in on a defined target, they tend to spare more healthy tissue than traditional chemotherapy — but they only work when a tumor carries the specific genetic feature the drug is built to block.
  6. Hormone therapy cuts off the hormonal fuel that some cancers run on. Prostate cancer and certain breast cancers are sensitive to testosterone and estrogen respectively, and therapies that lower those hormone levels or block their effect on tumor cells can slow or stop growth significantly.

Real-world treatment rarely means choosing just one of these options. Most people receive combinations tailored to their specific cancer type, stage, and genetic profile. Oncology has moved steadily toward personalized medicine — meaning the approach is shaped as much by the molecular fingerprint of your tumor as by where it sits in your body.

âš ī¸

Important! If something feels off, or if cancer runs in your family and you have never discussed your risk with a doctor, making that appointment is always worthwhile.

Emergency Resources

If you believe you are experiencing a medical emergency, call your local emergency number immediately.