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Cancers of unknown primary include a variety of cancers, which
may each have a number of different causes. For this reason, it would
be hard to assign a particular cause to CUP.
Cancer is the result of changes in a cell's DNA. DNA is the
chemical in each of our cells that makes up our genes -- the
instructions for how our cells function. It is packaged in chromosomes
- long strands of DNA in each cell. We normally have 23 pairs of
chromosomes in each cell in our body (one set of chromosomes comes from
each parent). We usually look like our parents because they are the
source of our DNA. But DNA affects more than how we look.
Some genes contain instructions for controlling when our cells
grow, divide, and die. Certain genes that promote cell division or
cause cells to live longer than they should are called oncogenes.
Others that slow down cell division, or cause cells to die at the right
time, are called tumor suppressor genes. Cancers can be caused by DNA
mutations (changes) that "turn on" oncogenes or "turn off" tumor
suppressor genes. In most cases, a number of mutations are needed
before a cell becomes cancerous.
Most of the DNA mutations related to CUP probably occur during
a person's lifetime rather than having been inherited before birth.
These acquired mutations may sometimes result from known exposures such
as tobacco smoke, ultraviolet light, radiation, or certain
cancer-causing chemicals, but often they occur for no apparent reason.
As scientists learn more about how cancers develop, they are
also beginning to understand why some cancers tend to grow and spread
so quickly that they are diagnosed as cancers of unknown primary.
Last Medical Review: 10/15/2009 Last Revised: 10/15/2009
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