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LUNG CANCER - Basic Information

Lung cancers are cancers that begin in the lungs. Other types of cancers may spread to the lungs from other organs. However, these are not lung cancers because they did not start in the lungs. When cancer cells spread from one organ to another, they are called metastases.

Research has found several risk factors for lung cancer. A "risk factor" is anything that changes risk of getting a disease. Different risk factors change risk by different amounts.

The risk factors for lung cancer include:

    • smoking and being around others' smoke
    • things around us at home or work (such as radon gas)
    • personal traits (such as having a family history of lung cancer

 

How To Quit Smoking?

Quitting is important for anyone who smokes tobacco -- even people who have smoked for many years. For people who already have cancer, quitting may reduce the chance of getting another cancer. Quitting also can help cancer treatments work better.

There are many ways to get help:

Ask your doctor about medicine or nicotine replacement therapy, such as a patch, gum, lozenge, nasal spray, or inhaler. Your doctor can suggest a number of treatments that help people quit.

Ask your doctor to help you find local programs or trained professionals who help people stop using tobacco.

* Call staff at NCI's Smoking Quitline (1-877-44U-QUIT) or instant message them through LiveHelp. They can tell you about:
* ways to quit smoking
* groups that help smokers who want to quit
* NCI publications about quitting smoking
* how to take part in a study of methods to help smokers quit

Go online to Smokefree.gov (http://www.smokefree.gov), a Federal Government Web site. It offers a guide to quitting smoking and a list of other resources.

The Framework Convention Alliance for Tobacco Control

 


 

Resources

MedlinePlus - Lung Cancer Link
MedlinePlus will direct you to information to help answer health questions. MedlinePlus brings together authoritative information from NLM, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and other government agencies and health-related organizations. MedlinePlus also has extensive information about drugs, an illustrated medical encyclopedia, interactive patient tutorials, and latest health news. To visit MedlinePlus online for Lung Cancer with an extensive, constantly updated resource list please click here 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
More details, including medically graphic images, can be found at the CDC website. Please click here

CDC's lung cancer "fast facts" please click here
CDC's Screening for lung cancer please click here

The National Cancer Institute (NCI)
has up-to-date information for patients and practitioners about lung cancer. To go to NCI main web page please click here

“What You Need To Know About™Lung Cancer”
NCI’s booklet about lung cancer. NCI 2006, 51 pages (pdf 1.7MB). To download the pdf file please click here

ASCO Answers: Lung Cancer
ASCO Answers is a series of fact sheets that provides an introduction to a specific type of cancer. Each fact sheet is a PDF that includes an overview of what the cancer is, an illustration of where the cancer starts, how it is treated, terms to know, and questions to ask the doctor.
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). 2008 2 pages, (pdf 636K. To download the pdf file please click here

The American Cancer Society (ACS)
is the nationwide community-based voluntary health organization dedicated to eliminating cancer as a major health problem by preventing cancer, saving lives, and diminishing suffering from cancer, through research, education, advocacy, and service.

To get to the ACS Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer information pages please click here
To get to the ACS Small Cell Lung Cancer information pages please click here

 


 

On-line tools

Siteman Cancer Center: Lung Cancer Risk Questionnaire

To estimate your risk of lung cancer and learn about ways to lower that risk, take a few minutes to answer some questions about your health, background, and lifestyle. To take the questionnaire online please click here
Lung cancer is the #1 cancer killer in the US. But the good news is that it doesn't have to be. Fully 90 percent of all lung cancers could be prevented if everyone quit smoking.

Learn more about some of the materials available on-line (more detailed information can be found using the links on top of this page)


Acknowledgment: This text is adapted from the CDC website.

 

 

 
 
Principal Investigator: Neal Palafox, MD, MPH:
Program Manager CCC/ Registry: Lee Buenconsejo-Lum, MD 
 Pacific CEED Manager: Karen Heckert, Ph.D., pacificceed@gmail.com
Program Coordinator (Registry): Tricia Eidsmoe, MPA pcregistry@gmail.com
Program Coordinator (CCC): Brian Roberts, MBA pacificcompcancer@gmail.com
 

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