Medscape
The incidence of lung cancer in never-smokers (LCINS) is increasing, and experts think climate change may be driving this. LCINS differs histologically and epidemiologically from smoking-related cancers, occurring almost always as adenocarcinomas and mostly affecting women and individuals of Asian ancestry, according to a study published in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology in January 2024…
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Potential Drivers of LCINS
The incidence of lung cancer in never-smokers (LCINS) is increasing, and experts think climate change may be driving this. LCINS differs histologically and epidemiologically from smoking-related cancers, occurring almost always as adenocarcinomas and mostly affecting women and individuals of Asian ancestry, according to a study published in Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology in January 2024…