Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths globally. Although smoking-related lung cancers continue to account for the majority of diagnoses, smoking rates have been decreasing for several decades. Lung cancer in individuals who have never smoked (LCINS) is estimated to be the...
AbstractObjective and design: To relate UK national trends since 1950 in smoking, in smoking cessation, and in lung cancer to the contrasting results from two large case-control studies centred around 1950 and 1990.Setting: United Kingdom.Participants: Hospital patients under 75 years of age with...
Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths globally. Although smoking-related lung cancers continue to account for the majority of diagnoses, smoking rates have been decreasing for several decades. Lung cancer in individuals who have never smoked (LCINS) is estimated to be the...
Lung canceris responsible for the most cancer-related deaths for both men and women throughout the world. The American Cancer Society estimated that about 234,80 new cases of lung cancer would be diagnosed and about 125,070 deaths due to lung cancer would occur in 2023. Not countingskincancer...
SmokingDose-Response Relationship, DrugAgedStatistics as TopicMiddle AgedEnglandIt has been shown previously that the precipitator hypothesis of causation is able to account for certain key features of the epidemiological evidence that conflict with initiator and promoter hypotheses. The precipitator ...
SmokingCOVID-19JapanIn Japan, high-quality cancer statistics are collected through cancer registries. However, these data are rarely summarized or reported in research articles. We compiled statistical data on lung cancer in Japan including the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2019, the number of cases of ...
Why Some Smokers Don't Get Cancer How Smoking Causes Cancer Other Cancers Are E-Cigarettes Safe? Predicting Risk Screening ByLynne Eldridge, MD Lynne Eldrige, MD, is a lung cancer physician, patient advocate, and award-winning author of "Avoiding Cancer One Day at a Time." ...
Switzerland, Austria, Turin and Barcelona occupy intermediate positions. The lung cancer mortality data suggest that inequalities in smoking contribute ... JP Mackenbach,M Huisman,O Andersen,... - 《European Journal of Cancer》 被引量: 453发表: 2004年 Trends in smoking and lung cancer mortality ...
Lung cancer and smoking trends in the young in Switzerland: a study based on data of the National Institute for Cancer Epidemiology and Registration and of the Swiss Health Surveys AIMS: We explored the trend in lung cancer incidence rates among a young Swiss population (30-54 years old) by...
Cigarette smoking steadily became the dominant tobacco product consumed in the United States in the early part of the twentieth century [1, 2]. With this rise in tobacco consumption came increased mortality rates related to lung cancer; however linking the two together did not come until the pop...