Air pollution might be playing an increasing role in causing the disease.
Lung cancer remains a leading cause of cancer death globally, with a significant rise in cases among non-smokers attributed ...
Lung cancer cases are increasing in people who have never smoked, especially in women, a new study by the World Health ...
A new study found that the proportion of people being diagnosed with lung cancer who have never smoked is increasing, and air ...
Although lung cancer has been the leading cause of lung-cancer death globally for decades, there are important temporal and geographical differences in lung-cancer incidence, mortality, and other ...
Lung cancer in people who've never smoked is a growing concern, and it's alarming to see it become the fifth leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide.
Researchers from the International Agency for Research on Cancer said for never-smokers, lung cancer was the fifth largest ...
New research has found that over 1,100 people in the UK develop lung cancer each year due to air pollution, with the most common subtype, adenocarcinoma, linked to toxic air exposure.
Most of them were men but there was a growing share of nearly a million cases among women. One key subtype of lung ...
A new study found an increase in adenocarcinoma, a lung cancer that is most commonly associated with nonsmokers.
Lung cancer in people who have never smoked is rising, and figures show China is at particular risk of air pollution-related ...
Estimated geographical and temporal distribution of lung-cancer incidence varied across the four main subtypes worldwide. Our ...