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Study sheds light on how inherited cancer mutations drive tumor growth

A new study, led by WashU Medicine researchers, takes a deep dive into inherited genetic mutations measured in a healthy blood sample and reports how those mutations might predispose a person to develop cancers later in life. (Image: Getty Images)
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Most cancer genome studies have focused on mutations in the tumor itself and how such gene variants allow a tumor to grow unchecked. A new study, led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, takes a deep dive into inherited cancer mutations measured in a healthy blood sample and reports how those mutations might take a toll on the body’s cells starting at birth, perhaps predisposing a person to develop cancers at various stages of life.