When lung cancer treatment stops working, what happens next? New research reveals the answer may depend on how the cancer grows.
Large cell carcinoma is aggressive, requiring early detection through imaging and biopsy for optimal treatment outcomes.
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Everything You Need to Know About Lung Cancer
Lung cancer is cancer that starts in your lungs. It is the leading cause of cancer death among men and women. Finding lung cancer early before it spreads improves your chances of beating the disease.
There was encouraging news last week, that, at long last, deaths related to lung cancer are going down significantly. However, in this week's Moves in Medicine, we look at the new challenge: Why are ...
Radon and smoking are both known causes of lung cancer, but when someone is exposed to both, the results can be deadly.
A stage 4 lung cancer diagnosis during COVID-19 led to extensive treatments, including chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiation, and clinical trials. A double lung transplant initially removed cancer, ...
Lung cancer remains the world’s deadliest cancer, and cigarette smoke is its chief culprit. Chemicals in tobacco, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), damage DNA and trigger the mutations ...
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