As a leukemia survivor, I believe knowing early changes everything. 5-10% of cancers are hereditary. Knowing your genetic risk isn't a verdict — it's an empowering tool to plan proactive health screening.
As someone who lived through leukemia, I know how frightening the word "cancer" is. But one thing that experience taught me is this: knowledge is power, and knowing early changes everything. I want us to see genetic cancer-risk testing as an empowering tool — not something to fear.
Most cancers come from a lifetime of accumulated factors, but roughly 5–10% stem from inherited mutations that run in families. Well-known examples:
Research finds these syndromes occur in roughly 1 in 300–500 people and underlie about 10% of breast cancers and 3–5% of colorectal cancers. Carrying these genes does not mean cancer is certain — it means a higher-than-average risk that can be managed with appropriate monitoring.
Preventive health screening is a good starting point — see the future of DNA-based wellness.
The key idea: risk is not destiny. Once you know, you can act proactively — screen more often, adjust lifestyle, and decide together with your doctor. And remember the result matters for your whole family, so talking with close relatives is important. This is the same philosophy I apply to myself — it starts with knowing your body. Read more in what cancer taught me about owning my biology and the value of early cancer detection.
I don't want anyone to live in fear — I want everyone to live with information and readiness. Knowing your genetic risk is a gift to your future self. Start by talking to your doctor. And remember: knowing early is the greatest power of all.
1. If I have a BRCA gene, will I definitely get cancer?
No. Carrying a risk gene means higher risk, not certainty. Appropriate monitoring can substantially reduce the danger.
2. Does everyone need cancer gene testing?
Not everyone. It's most valuable if you have a family history of cancer or early-onset cases — discuss it with a doctor or genetic counselor.
3. What should I do if testing finds a risk?
Always interpret results with a doctor or genetic counselor to plan appropriate monitoring and care.