| Women
smokers' lung cancer risk twice that of men's
Cigarette-smoking
women run twice the risk of lung cancer as men who smoke but are
far less likely to die from the disease than males!
Tuesday,
July 11, 2006 - CNN
CHICAGO, Illinois
(Reuters) -- Cigarette-smoking women run twice the risk of lung
cancer as men who smoke but are far less likely to die from the
disease than males, according to a study published on Tuesday.
Why women are more
susceptible to the cancer-causing agents in cigarette smoke is not
clear, the report said, but the findings indicate that women who
smoke should be screened sooner and targeted with anti-smoking messages
earlier.
The conclusions, from researchers
at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center in
New York City, were based on 7,498 women and 9,427 men, at least
40 years of age and with a history of cigarette smoking, who were
checked for lung cancer between 1993 and 2005.
When the study started none had
lung cancer. Later 156 women and 113 men developed the disease.
"Given the same exposure, women
are less likely to die from lung cancer than men, but they also
have double the risk of getting the disease," said Claudia
Henschke, the physician who led the study. "We're not really
sure why that might be."
Overall, women were 52 percent less
likely to die of the disease, said the report published in this
week's Journal of the American Medical Association.
Henschke said public health officials
need to warn teen-age girls especially that they face a higher risk
of lung cancer.
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