Of course, environmental exposures by themselves do not cause cancer. Cancer is complex and
involves many gene-gene interactions that occur inside you and are not well understood. For
example, certain randomly occurring gene changes may be accumulating in your body's cells right
now. And these same kinds of changes may not be occurring in your friends, your coworkers, or
even your family members, even though all of you remain in a similar environment most of the
time. Over your lifetime, random gene changes are passed along as your body cells grow and
divide, so they accumulate. The unique patterns that evolve over time may make some people more
likely than others to increase their risk for cancer after exposure to a particular chemical or after
choosing a particular behavior.
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