What do genes have to do with cancer?
Cancer is caused by certain changes to genes (called variants) that control the way our cells function, especially how they grow and divide.
Genes
Genes are small pieces of DNA. They have instructions for how cells should function, and they can contain information about inherited traits such as height and eye color, as well as susceptibility to certain diseases. Genes can change, and a change in a gene is called a variant. Some variants can lead to cancer. There are two types of variants: those that happen in our lifetime (acquired variants) and those that are passed down through families (inherited variants).
Acquired Variants
Gene variants that develop during your lifetime are acquired variants. They occur as you get older and are the result of the wear and tear of life, the environment around you, and sometimes, lifestyle choices. You do not inherit these variants from your parents and you cannot pass them on to children. Acquired variants are not found in all your cells - sometimes, there may be acquired variants in just cancer cells. These can affect how cancer grows and spreads.
Most biomarker testing is looking at acquired variants in the tumor cell, or other markers of a variant.
Inherited Variants
Some variants are passed down through families; they are inherited. These variants came from your parents and can be passed on to your biological children. Some inherited variants may increase your risk of getting cancer. You may hear them described as genes that cause cancer. In fact, it is the change or variant in the gene — not the gene itself — that can increase the risk of cancer.
Genetic testing, or hereditary testing, looks at inherited variants that may put you at an increased risk of developing cancer.