| Basic
Information
Lung
cancers are cancers that begin in the lungs. Other types of cancers
may spread to the lungs from other organs. However, these are not
lung cancers because they did not start in the lungs. When cancer
cells spread from one organ to another, they are called metastases.
Research has
found several risk factors for lung cancer. A "risk factor"
is anything that changes risk of getting a disease. Different risk
factors change risk by different amounts.
The risk factors
for lung cancer include the following:
- smoking and
being around others' smoke
- things around
us at home or work (such as radon gas)
- personal
traits (such as having a family history of lung cancer)
Symptoms
Different people have different symptoms for lung cancer. Some people
don't have any symptoms at all. About 25% of people with lung cancer
do not have symptoms from advanced cancer when their lung cancer
is found.43 Lung cancer symptoms may include
- shortness
of breath
- coughing
that doesn't go away
- wheezing
- coughing
up blood
- chest pain
- fever
- weight loss
Other changes
that can sometimes occur with lung cancer may include repeated bouts
of pneumonia, changes in the shape of the fingertips, and swollen
or enlarged lymph nodes (glands) in the upper chest and lower neck.
These symptoms
can happen with other illnesses, too. People with symptoms should
talk to their doctor, especially if they smoke, but even if they
don't. Doctors can help find the cause.
Fast
Facts
Aside from non-melanoma skin cancer, lung cancer is
- the second
most common cancer for all men in the United States
- the second
most common cancer among white and American Indian Alaska Native
women
- the third
most common cancer among black, Asian/Pacific Islander and
Hispanic women36
In 2002 (the
most recent year for which statistics are currently available):
- 100,099 men
and 80,163 women were diagnosed with lung cancer*
- 90,121 men
and 67,509 women died from lung cancer*36
- For more
information about lung cancer rates, visit Statistics.
*Incidence counts
cover approximately 93% of the US population; death counts cover
100% of the US population. Use caution in comparing incidence and
death counts.
Diagnosis and Treatment
A person’s
lung cancer diagnosis depends on the type of lung cancer present.
The two main types of lung cancer are small cell lung cancer and
non-small cell lung cancer. Non-small cell lung cancer is more common
than small cell lung cancer. These categories refer to what the
cancer cells look like under a microscope.
The extent of
disease is referred to as the stage. Information about how big a
cancer is or how far it has spread is often used to determine the
stage. Doctors use information about stage to plan treatment and
to monitor progress.
Sources: CDC
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Read
More
Lung cancer is the
number one cancer killer among both men and women. One third of
all cancer-related deaths in the United States are due to lung cancer.
While the number of men who get lung cancer has dropped slightly
in recent years, the number of women who get lung cancer has steadily
grown. For about 40 years, breast cancer was the leading cause of
cancer-related death in women until lung cancer replaced it in 1987.
Click here
to read more: http://www.cedars-sinai.edu/5270.html?wt.srch=1
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