Prospective parents going through IVF and preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) often ask, “Is cervical cancer hereditary?” This is a crucial question when planning for a healthy future child. In this post, we provide a medically accurate explanation of cervical cancer’s causes and how advanced genetic screening (like Orchid’s whole-genome embryo testing) can inform and reassure parents making proactive reproductive decisions.
Genetic vs. Environmental Causes of Cervical Cancer
Cervical cancer is rarely an inherited disease. Most common cervical cancers are not hereditary, and in fact about 70% of cases are caused by high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. In other words, the primary cause is an environmental factor (a virus), not a gene passed down from parent to child. Only very rare types of cervical cancer have a direct genetic component – for example, a mutation in the DICER1 gene can predispose to an unusual cervical tumor in childhood (Cervical cancer: Is it genetic? ).
Even having a family member with cervical cancer does not usually mean the cancer is “inherited”; families more often share lifestyle or environmental risk factors rather than a specific cervical cancer gene (Is Cervical Cancer Genetic? An Overview of Risk Factors). High-risk HPV remains the dominant risk factor, while factors like smoking or a weakened immune system can also play a role in cervical cancer development.