A Surprising Link: Food and Lung Cancer For decades, lung cancer has been firmly associated with cigarette smoking and, for ...
Healthy eaters who never smoked are getting lung cancer—and scientists think pesticides on produce may be why.
An unexpected study found that young non-smokers with healthier diets had higher rates of lung cancer, raising questions ...
Lung cancer remains the leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States and older adults are at higher risk. But only ...
Lung cancer remains one of the deadliest cancers, responsible for 1 in 4 cancer deaths in the US. Historically, it has been one of the most difficult to manage and cure. However, “the research story ...
Researchers have warned that nicotine-based e-cigarettes are likely to cause lung and oral cancers, raising fresh concerns over the safety of vaping and challenging claims that it is a harmless ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Approximately 53,000 of about 4.3 million smokers developed lung cancer. The cohort also included 6,351 lung ...
The connection between smoking cigarettes and lung cancer risk has been clear for decades — but what about marijuana? As more U.S. states legalize recreational cannabis, new and developing research ...
Efren Flores, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, discussed the findings of a subanalysis of the Screen ASSIST tobacco cessation clinical trial. Several sociodemographic ...
Smoking is a harmful habit that affects not only the smoker but also those around them, particularly children. The impact of secondhand smoke on children’s health is profound, with the lungs being one ...
Integrating smoking cessation into a lung cancer screening program had the biggest benefit for patients who wanted to quit, a randomized trial showed. Self-reported tobacco abstinence was greater at ...