Many risk factors are associated with the development of cancer, one of them being exposure to carcinogens. A carcinogen is a substance that has the potential to cause cancer. This article will review carcinogens and how they can cause cancer.
How Carcinogens Cause Cancer
Carcinogens can be chemical substances, viruses, or even medications or radiation therapies used to treat cancer. Carcinogenic substances can cause cancer in different ways.
One of the ways carcinogens can lead to cancer is through direct damage to the DNA inside of a cell. The damage done by the carcinogen directly to the DNA then causes that DNA to become abnormal and not continue to function normally. This eventually leads to the development of cancer.
Another way that carcinogens can cause cancer to develop is more indirect. When damage occurs to a cell’s DNA, the body has to perform repair processes to try to fix the damage. Sometimes the damage caused by the carcinogen interferes with the ability of the repair work, which has caused mutations in the function of those cells. The body is then unable to repair the damage, leading to cancer development.
People can be exposed to carcinogens in a variety of ways, including:
Lifestyle choices: Foods, smoking habits, lack of physical activity Natural exposures: Ultraviolet light, radon gas, and infectious agents Medical treatments: Radiation, chemotherapy, hormones, immunosuppressants Workplace exposures: Exposure to industrial chemicals or products while at work Household exposures: Cleaning products, paints, herbicides, pesticides Pollution: Outdoor air pollution or even secondhand tobacco smoke
Some carcinogens do not directly cause cancer but can lead to cancer. Carcinogens also can cause cancer from long-term, high levels of exposure.
Classification of Carcinogens
Carcinogens are classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). The IARC is an intergovernmental agency that puts substances into one of five categories based on the strength of the evidence that they can cause cancer in humans.
Known Substances That Are Carcinogenic to Humans
Sometimes it can be difficult to test and classify substances as carcinogenic to humans, and it isn’t ethical to expose people to them in research just to see if they cause cancer. Therefore researchers have only been able to classify a little over 100 substances as “carcinogenic to humans.”
Some of the most common group 1 carcinogens are:
Alcoholic beverages Aluminum production Arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds Asbestos (all forms) and mineral substances (such as talc or vermiculite) that contain asbestos Coal, indoor emissions from household combustion Engine exhaust, diesel Epstein-Barr virus (infection with) Estrogen postmenopausal therapy Helicobacter pylori (infection with) Hepatitis B virus (chronic infection with) Hepatitis C virus (chronic infection with) Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) (infection with) Human papillomavirus (HPV) (infection with certain types) Ionizing radiation (all types) Iron and steel founding (workplace exposure) Outdoor air pollution Radon Tobacco, smokeless Tobacco smoke, secondhand Tobacco smoking Ultraviolet (UV) radiation and ultraviolet-emitting tanning beds
Summary
Carcinogens are substances that can possibly cause cancer due to the damage they cause to DNA inside the cells. DNA tries to repair itself, but it sometimes can’t because of the problems carcinogens have caused. Ultimately, cancer grows.
The IARC evaluates the carcinogenicity of substances and classifies them based on scientific evidence. More than 100 substances are considered carcinogenic to humans.
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