Chemotherapy Alters DNA, Accelerates Aging in Healthy Cells

Recent research shows that chemotherapy can leave behind changes in healthy cells that may affect a person’s health years after treatment.
Chemotherapy Alters DNA, Accelerates Aging in Healthy Cells
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After chemotherapy, a 3-year-old cancer patient’s blood cells showed the genetic wear of an 80-year-old, highlighting new evidence that life-saving drugs leave lasting damage in healthy cells—a change that can persist for a lifetime.

Chemotherapy can permanently damage the DNA of healthy blood cells, causing them to age prematurely and potentially increasing patients’ risk of developing secondary cancers decades later, recent research shows.
George Citroner
George Citroner
Author
George Citroner reports on health and medicine, covering topics that include cancer, infectious diseases, and neurodegenerative conditions. He was awarded the Media Orthopaedic Reporting Excellence (MORE) award in 2020 for a story on osteoporosis risk in men.