Lung cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells
in one or both lungs. These abnormal cells do not carry out the
functions of normal lung cells and do not develop into healthy lung
tissue. As they grow, the abnormal cells can form tumors and interfere
with the functioning of the lung, which provides oxygen to the body via
the blood.
The Genetic Basis of Lung Cancer
All cells in the body contain the genetic material called deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
Every time a mature cell divides into two new cells, its DNA is exactly
duplicated. The cells are copies of the original cell, identical in
every way. In this way our bodies continually replenish themselves. Old
cells die off and the next generation replaces them.
A cancer begins with an error, or mutation, in a cell’s DNA.
DNA mutations can be caused by the normal aging process or through
environmental factors, such as cigarette smoke, breathing in asbestos
fibers, and to exposure to radon gas.
Researchers have found that it takes a series of mutations
to create a lung cancer cell. Before becoming fully cancerous, cells
can be precancerous, in that they have some mutations but still function
normally as lung cells. When a cell with a genetic mutation divides, it
passes along its abnormal genes to the two new cells, which then divide
into four cells with errors in their DNA and so on. With each new
mutation, the lung tissue cell becomes more mutated and may not be as
effective in carrying out its function as a lung cell. At a later stage
of disease, some cells may travel away from the original tumor and start
growing in other parts of the body. This process is call metastasis and the new distant sites are referred to as metastases.
Primary Versus Secondary Lung Cancer
Primary lung cancer starts in the lungs. The cancer cells are
abnormal lung cells. Sometimes, people will have cancer travel from
another part of their body or metastasize to their
lungs. This is called secondary lung cancer because the lungs are a
secondary site compared to the original primary location of the cancer.
So, for example, breast cancer cells which have traveled to the lung are
not lung cancer but rather metastatic breast cancer, and will require
treatment prescribed for breast cancer rather than lung cancer.
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