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Plain-language explanations based on National Cancer Institute resources · Educational only, not medical advice · How we verify

Cancer Explained

Cancer Screening: An Overview

A plain-language overview of what cancer screening is, its goals, and its benefits and harms, based on National Cancer Institute resources.

Source: National Cancer Institute · NCI reviewed 2023-10-20 · Verified 2026-07-02

7 min readBeginnerUpdated 2026-07-02

The 30-second version

Cancer screening means looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms, when it may be easier to treat. Some screening tests have been shown to help people live longer, but all tests have possible harms as well as benefits. Talking with your healthcare team helps you decide which tests are right for you.

Key takeaways

  • Cancer screening is looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms.
  • Screening tests include physical exams, laboratory tests, imaging procedures, and genetic tests.
  • All screening tests have risks, including false-positive and false-negative results.
  • Some screening tests have been shown to lower the chance of dying from a cancer; others have not.
  • Understanding the benefits and harms helps you make an informed choice with your healthcare provider.
  • Screening tests are not meant to diagnose cancer; an abnormal result usually leads to more tests.

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The full explanation.

The simple version

Cancer screening is looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms. Screening tests can help find cancer at an early stage, before symptoms appear. When abnormal tissue or cancer is found early, it may be easier to treat or cure. By the time symptoms appear, a cancer may have grown and spread, which can make it harder to treat.

It is important to remember that when your doctor suggests a screening test, it does not always mean they think you have cancer. Screening tests are done when you have no cancer symptoms.

In short: screening looks for cancer early, before you feel anything wrong.

Kinds of screening tests

Screening tests include:

  • Physical exam and history — a check of the body for general signs of health, including lumps or anything unusual, plus a look at your health habits and past illnesses.
  • Laboratory tests — tests of samples such as tissue, blood, or urine.
  • Imaging procedures — procedures that make pictures of areas inside the body.
  • Genetic tests — a lab test that looks for changes in genes or chromosomes that may be a sign of a disease or a risk of one.

Screening tests have risks

Not all screening tests are helpful, and most have risks. It helps to know a test's risks and whether it has been shown to lower the chance of dying from cancer.

  • Some tests can cause problems. For example, colon cancer screening with sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy can cause tears in the lining of the colon.
  • False-positive results are possible. A test may appear abnormal even when there is no cancer. This can cause anxiety and usually leads to more tests, which also have risks.
  • False-negative results are possible. A test may appear normal even when cancer is present. This may cause a person to delay care.
  • Finding a cancer may not help. Some cancers never cause symptoms or become life-threatening. There is no way to know if treating such a cancer would help a person live longer, and treatments have side effects.

In short: every screening test has benefits and harms.

Making an informed choice

Understanding the benefits and harms of screening tests is important for choosing which ones are right for you. Before having any screening test, discuss it with your doctor or other healthcare provider. Your provider should talk with you about the benefits, harms, and unknowns of a test and include you in the decision. This is called informed and shared decision-making. Sometimes the harms and benefits are closely matched, and the choice is hard to make.

What screening can and cannot do

A screening test that works well finds cancer before symptoms appear, screens for a cancer that is easier to treat when found early, has few false results, and lowers the chance of dying from that cancer.

Screening tests are not meant to diagnose cancer. If a result is abnormal, more tests may be done to check for cancer. For example, a screening mammogram may find a lump, but a lump may be cancer or something else. Diagnostic tests, which may include a biopsy, are needed to find out.

Does screening help people live longer?

For many cancers, the chance of recovery depends on the stage — how much the cancer has spread — when it is found. Cancers found at earlier stages are often easier to treat. Some screening tests have been shown both to find cancers early and to lower the chance of dying from them, such as mammograms for breast cancer, and sigmoidoscopy and fecal occult blood testing for colorectal cancer. Other tests find cancer early but have not been proven to lower the risk of dying from it.

Studies of screening compare death rates in people who are screened with those who are not. Some things can make screening look more helpful than it is, such as lead-time bias, overdiagnosis, and healthy screenee bias. This is why researchers study screening carefully before a test becomes a standard test.

Your healthcare team is the best source of information about which screening tests make sense for you.

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Cancer Screening: An Overview: the quick overview

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Cancer Screening: An Overview, explained simply

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Understanding cancer screening: an overview — full lesson

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Suggested animation storyboard
  1. 1Open on a calm title card: "Cancer Screening: An Overview" with the Cancer Explained mark.
  2. 2Narrator reads the 30-second summary while a soft animated diagram builds on screen: "Cancer screening means looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms, when it may be easier to treat. Some screening tests have been shown to help people live longer, but all tests have possible harms as well as benefits. Talking with your healthcare team helps you decide which tests are right for you."
  3. 3Scene 2: illustrate the idea — "Cancer screening is looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms."
  4. 4Scene 3: illustrate the idea — "Screening tests include physical exams, laboratory tests, imaging procedures, and genetic tests."
  5. 5Scene 4: illustrate the idea — "All screening tests have risks, including false-positive and false-negative results."
  6. 6Close on a reminder card: this is educational only; talk with your healthcare team, and a link to the NCI source.

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Quick knowledge check

According to this article, what does cancer screening mean?

Frequently asked questions

What is cancer screening?

Cancer screening is looking for cancer before a person has any symptoms. Screening tests can help find cancer at an early stage, when abnormal tissue or cancer may be easier to treat or cure. When your doctor suggests a screening test, it does not always mean they think you have cancer — screening is done when you have no symptoms.

What kinds of screening tests are there?

Screening tests include a physical exam and history, laboratory tests (which test samples such as tissue, blood, or urine), imaging procedures (which make pictures of the inside of the body), and genetic tests (which look for changes in genes or chromosomes).

Do screening tests have risks?

Yes. All screening tests have possible risks. Some procedures can cause problems such as bleeding. Tests can also give false-positive results (showing cancer when there is none) or false-negative results (showing no cancer when there is). And sometimes finding a cancer does not improve a person's health or help them live longer.

Does screening always mean I will live longer?

Not always. Some screening tests have been shown to lower the chance of dying from a cancer, such as mammograms for breast cancer. Others find cancer early but have not been proven to lower the risk of dying from it. If a cancer grows and spreads quickly, finding it early may not help a person survive it.

Is a screening test the same as a diagnosis?

No. Screening tests are not meant to diagnose cancer. If a screening result is abnormal, more tests may be done to find out whether cancer is present. These are called diagnostic tests and may include a biopsy.

Who needs to be screened?

Some screening tests are suggested only for people at higher risk of certain cancers, such as those with a personal or family history of cancer, certain gene changes, exposure to cancer-causing agents, or older age. People at higher risk may need to be screened more often or at an earlier age. Your healthcare provider can help decide what is right for you.

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  1. Q1.According to this article, what does cancer screening mean?
  2. Q2.According to this article, what is a false-positive screening result?
  3. Q3.According to this article, are screening tests meant to diagnose cancer?
  4. Q4.According to this article, what is 'informed and shared decision-making'?

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Questions to ask your healthcare team

Consider bringing these questions to your next appointment.

  • Which screening tests do you recommend for me, and why?
  • What are the benefits and harms of this screening test?
  • When should I start being screened, and how often?
  • Am I at higher risk for any cancer that would change my screening plan?
  • What happens if a screening result comes back abnormal?
  • What would the next steps be if a test suggests a possible cancer?

Related learning map

How this explanation connects to 16 other things you can explore — related topics, terms, questions, practice, and its NCI source.

Cancer Screening: An Overview