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Lung cancer survival among never smokers

Authors :
Ana Casal-Mouriño
Juan Miguel Barros-Dios
Luis Valdés
Alberto Ruano-Ravina
Source :
Cancer letters. 451
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Lung cancer incidence among never smokers has increased in recent decades with 10-30% of all lung cancers occurring in never smokers, where exposure to residential radon is the leading cause of this disease. Lung cancer survival is low, ranging from 12% to 16% at 5 years of diagnosis. There is scant evidence to date on survival from this disease in never smokers. We aim to evaluate lung cancer survival in never smokers and ascertain whether there might be differences regarding smokers, through a systematic review applying predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria. 17 Studies were included. Never-smoker lung cancer patients seem to experience longer survival times than do smokers or ex-smokers. Lung cancer in never smokers displays distinctive clinical characteristics, is more frequent among women, is diagnosed at more advanced stages, and the predominant histologic type is adenocarcinoma. Further studies are necessary to ascertain lung cancer survival among never smokers.

Details

ISSN :
18727980
Volume :
451
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....794b44e7b5d30c0e7dfb8ea774e6fd5a