Fundamentals of Cancer Detection, Treatment, and Prevention. Surya K. De

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Fundamentals of Cancer Detection, Treatment, and Prevention - Surya K. De

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      2.1 Introduction

      Cancer prevention therefore includes adopting behaviors and habits that reduce the risk of developing cancer, such as maintaining a healthy lifestyle, avoiding exposure to known cancer‐causing substances, getting recommended cancer screenings, and taking medicines or vaccines that can prevent many types of cancer from developing [1–136].

      Estrogens are a group of hormones that function in human sexual and reproductive development, mostly in women. Although these hormones have essential physiological roles in both sexes, they have also been linked with an increased risk of many cancers. For example, undertaking combined menopausal hormone therapy, consisting of estrogen plus progestin (a synthetic version of the female hormone progesterone), can increase the risk of breast cancer in women. Menopausal hormone therapy using estrogen alone may increase the risk of endometrial cancer, and it is used only in women who have had a hysterectomy. Women considering menopausal hormone therapy should discuss possible risks and benefits with a medical specialist.

      Researchers have discovered that a woman's risk of breast cancer is related to the estrogen and progesterone produced by her ovaries, which are known as endogenous estrogen and progesterone [1–12]. Exposure to a high level of these hormones, or over a lengthy period of time, has been associated with an increased risk of developing breast cancer. High levels of exposure can be caused by starting menstruation early, going through menopause late, having a first pregnancy late in life, or never giving birth. Conversely, however, giving birth is also a protective factor with regard to developing breast cancer.

Schematic illustration of HPV infection causes several types of cancers.

      Other practical ways to reduce exposure to pathogens linked to cancer development are having safe sex, and in the case of drug users, not sharing hypodermic needles. The more sexual partners an individual has during his or her lifetime, the greater are the chances of contracting sexually transmitted infections like HIV or HPV. Safe sex consists of limiting the number of sexual partners and using a condom. For intravenous drug users, sharing needles with an infected person poses the risk of contracting HIV or infection with hepatitis B or C.

      People who receive organ transplants sometimes take medications to suppress the immune system so that the body will not reject the organ. These drugs are immunosuppressive, and like environmental pathogens, weaken the body's immune system so they cannot adequately destroy cancer cells or resist infections associated with cancer.

      Transplant recipients have a higher risk of developing several different types of cancers, some of which are directly linked to infectious agents, and others not. The four most common cancers among transplant recipients, which develop more frequently in these individuals than in the general population, include non‐Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), lung, kidney, and liver cancers. NHL has been shown to be associated with EBV infection.

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