Our body is made of trillions of tiny cells. These cells keep growing, dividing, and replacing old cells every day.
But during this process, cells can get damaged. This is normal. The body usually handles it well. The interesting question scientists study is:
If many cells get damaged, why don’t all of them become cancer? Why do some recover while some turn dangerous?
1. Cells get damaged all the time
Cell damage happens from many things:
- Aging
- Sunlight / UV rays
- Smoking
- Pollution
- Chemicals
- Viruses
- Alcohol
- Stress inside the body
- Mistakes while copying DNA during cell division
Even healthy people have damaged cells every day.
2. DNA is the instruction book of the cell
Inside every cell is DNA.
You can think of DNA like the cell’s instruction manual. It tells the cell:
- when to grow
- when to divide
- what work to do
- when to stop
- when to die
If DNA gets damaged, the instructions can become wrong.
Example:
A cell may receive a wrong signal like:
“Keep dividing… keep dividing… don’t stop.”
That can lead to cancer.
3. The body has repair systems
The good news is:
Our body has strong systems to protect us.
When a cell gets damaged, the body usually does one of these:
Repair the damage
Special proteins repair broken DNA.
Stop the cell from dividing
The cell is paused so it doesn’t spread damage.
Kill the damaged cell
This is called apoptosis (programmed cell death).
The body removes the dangerous cell safely.
Immune system destroys it
Immune cells can detect abnormal cells and attack them.
Most damaged cells are removed this way before they become a problem.
4. Then why does cancer happen?
Cancer can happen when a damaged cell escapes all these safety checks.
This usually happens when:
DNA damage is not repaired
The repair system misses the mistake.
Cell doesn’t die when it should
Instead of self-destructing, it survives.
Immune system doesn’t recognize it
The abnormal cell hides from immune cells.
It keeps multiplying
One abnormal cell becomes two → four → eight → thousands.
This forms a tumor.
5. Why do some damaged cells survive but not become cancer?
Not every damaged cell becomes cancer.
Some damaged cells:
- stay alive
- but stop dividing
These are called senescent cells.
They’re damaged—but inactive.
So they survive, but don’t turn into a tumor immediately.
6. Why do some become cancerous?
Scientists believe cancer happens when mutations affect important genes that control growth.
Some important genes are:
Tumor suppressor genes
These are like brakes in a car.
They stop cells from growing too much.
If these brakes fail → the cell can grow uncontrollably.
Example: p53 gene.
Oncogenes
These are like the accelerator pedal.
If stuck ON → the cell keeps dividing nonstop.
That can create cancer.
7. Role of the immune system
Your immune system constantly checks your body.
It can often find abnormal cells and kill them.
But sometimes cancer cells learn to hide.
Then immune cells miss them.
That’s when the cancer can keep growing.
This is why immunity matters in cancer prevention.
8. What new studies are trying to understand
Scientists are now studying:
- why one damaged cell repairs itself
- why another dies
- why another survives quietly
- and why another becomes cancer
They look at things like:
- gene mutations
- cell stress
- inflammation
- aging
- immune response
- surrounding tissue environment
Even two damaged cells can behave differently depending on where they are in the body.
Easy example
Imagine 4 students make mistakes in an exam:
Student 1 → corrects mistake ✔️
Student 2 → stops writing ✋
Student 3 → paper is removed ❌
Student 4 → keeps writing wrong answers again and again 🚨
That 4th one is like a cancer cell.
Simple summary
Cells get damaged every day.
Usually the body:
- repairs them
- stops them
- or destroys them
But if a damaged cell:
- survives,
- avoids repair,
- escapes the immune system,
- and keeps dividing,
it can become cancerous.
That’s why:
Some damaged cells survive safely… while others turn into cancer.


