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By Lisa Fayed
Medically reviewed by
Douglas A. Nelson, MD
A carcinogen is any substance or agent that
causes cancer.
It does so by altering the cellular metabolism or by damaging
DNA in our cells, interfering with normal cellular processes.
The identification of substances in the environment that cause
people to become ill with cancer helps in prevention efforts.
Carcinogens can be chemical substances, viruses, or even
medications and radiation therapies used to treat cancer.
While a carcinogen or a combination of carcinogens can cause
cancer, it may not always be the only reason since the tendency to develop
cancer can be inherited.
How Carcinogens Cause Cancer
Carcinogenic substances can cause cancer in the following
different ways:
·
By directly damaging the DNA in cells leading to mutations
(disrupting the normal process of cells)
·
By not affecting the DNA directly, but instead causing cells to
divide at a faster rate than normal, which can increase the chances that DNA
changes and mutations will occur.
The cell’s DNA can be damaged by a wide range of substances and
exposures, including:
·
Natural exposure: to ultraviolet light, radon gas, infectious
agents
·
Medical treatment: radiation and chemotherapy, hormones, immunosuppressants
·
Workplace exposure: some jobs have increased exposure to
industrial chemicals or products
·
Household exposure: cleaning products, paints, herbicides, and
pesticides, etc.
·
Pollution: outdoor air pollution or even secondhand tobacco
smoke
Some carcinogens do not directly cause cancer but can lead to
cancer.
Some carcinogens cause cancer if you have long-term, high levels
of exposure.
How your body reacts to this level of exposure, the length, the
time, and the intensity of the exposure, combined with your genetic makeup,
will determine the risk of developing cancer.
Classification of Carcinogens
The IARC is part of the World Health Organization (WHO) and its
main goal is to determine the cancer-causing potential of different substances
and classify carcinogens accordingly.
Carcinogens are classified into one of the following groups:
·
Group 1: Carcinogenic to humans
·
Group 2A: Probably carcinogenic to humans.
·
Group 2B: Possibly carcinogenic to humans.
·
Group 3: Unclassifiable as to carcinogenicity in humans
·
Group 4: Probably not carcinogenic to humans
Known Substances That Are Carcinogenic to Humans
It can be difficult to test and classify substances as
carcinogenic to humans as it is not ethical to test to see if
something can cause cancer by exposing people to it.
Therefore, researchers have only been able to classify a
little over 100 substances as “carcinogenic to humans.”
Some of the most common substances and exposures known as being
carcinogenic to humans include (there are many more):
·
Alcoholic beverages
·
Arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds
·
Benzene
·
Cadmium and cadmium compounds
·
Coal, indoor emissions from household combustion
·
Engine exhaust, diesel
·
Epstein-Barr virus (infection with)
·
Estrogen postmenopausal therapy
·
Formaldehyde
·
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)
·
Leather dust
·
Mineral oils, untreated or mildly treated
·
MOPP and other combined chemotherapy including alkylating agents
·
Nickel compounds
·
Outdoor air pollution
·
Paint (workplace exposure as a painter)
·
Processed meat (consumption of)
·
Radon
·
Rubber manufacturing industry
·
Shale oils
·
Silica dust, crystalline, in the form of quartz or cristobalite
·
Solar radiation
·
Tobacco, smokeless
·
Tobacco smoke,
secondhand
·
Tobacco smoking
·
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation and ultraviolet-emitting tanning
devices
·
Vinyl chloride
·
Wood dust
·
X- and Gamma-radiation
Lisa
Fayed
Medical
Writer, Cancer Educator
Expertise
Cervical
Cancer
Education
University
of Florida
Highlights
Lisa
Fayed is a freelance medical writer, cancer educator and patient advocate.
Experience
Lisa
Fayed is a former writer for Verywell Health covering cervical
cancer. Before she was a patient advocate and cancer educator, she was a
cervical cancer patient herself. Lisa is currently working to improve cervical
cancer screening programs in underdeveloped countries."
Education
Lisa
holds a Bachelor of Science degree in biology from the University of Florida in
Gainesville, Florida.
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