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A risk factor is anything that affects the chance of having a
disease such as cancer. Different cancers have different risk factors.
For example, exposing skin to strong sunlight is a risk factor for skin
cancer. Smoking is a risk factor for several types of cancer.
Unlike many adult cancers, lifestyle-related risk factors do
not seem to play a large role in childhood cancers.
No environmental factors (such as exposures during the
mother's pregnancy or in early childhood) are known to increase the
chance of getting rhabdomyosarcoma.
Inherited conditions
Some people inherit a tendency to develop certain types of
cancer. The DNA we inherit from our parents may have certain changes
that account for this tendency to develop cancer. Some rare inherited
conditions increase the risk of rhabdomyosarcoma (and usually some
other tumors as well).
- Members of families with Li-Fraumeni syndrome
are more likely to develop sarcomas, breast cancer, leukemia, and some
other cancers.
- Children with Beckwith-Wiedemann
syndrome have a high risk of developing Wilms tumor, a
type of kidney cancer, but they may also develop rhabdomyosarcoma.
- Neurofibromatosis,
also known as von
Recklinghausen disease, usually causes multiple nerve
tumors, but it also increases the risk of rhabdomyosarcoma.
- Costello
syndrome is a very rare congenital abnormality. Children
with this syndrome have high birth weights but then fail to grow well
and are short. They also tend to have a large head. They are prone to
develop rhabdomyosarcomas as well as other tumors.
These conditions are rare and account for only a small
fraction of rhabdomyosarcoma cases. But they suggest that the key to
understanding rhabdomyosarcoma will come from studying genes and how
they work in very early life to control cell growth and development.
Last Medical Review: 09/08/2009 Last Revised: 09/08/2009
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