Although at least 90 percent of all cancers are sporadic, meaning that they do not seem to run in families, nearly 10 percent of cancers are now recognized as familial, and some are actually inherited in an apparently autosomal dominant manner. Cancer may therefore be considered a multifactorial disease, resulting from the combined influence of many genetic factors acting in concert with environmental insults (e.g., ultraviolet radiation, cigarette smoke, and viruses). Cancers, both familial and sporadic, generally arise from alterations in one or more of three classes of genes: oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, and genes whose products participate in genome ...(100 of 11784 words)