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  2. Woman, 55, who never smoked reveals the 1 symptom that ... - AOL

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    55-year-old Devonne Swift never smoked. After developing a persistent cough, she received a lifesaving early lung cancer diagnosis – all thanks to a new technology, robotic bronchoscopy.

  3. Health effects of tobacco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_effects_of_tobacco

    The risk of dying from lung cancer before age 85 is 22.1% for a male smoker and 11.9% for a female smoker, in the absence of competing causes of death. The corresponding estimates for lifelong nonsmokers are a 1.1% probability of dying from lung cancer before age 85 for a man of European descent, and a 0.8% probability for a woman. [70]

  4. More older former smokers need lung cancer screening, experts say

    www.aol.com/news/more-older-former-smokers-lung...

    The update also expands the organization's recommended age range for lung cancer screening to 50 to 80 years, from the previous range of 55 to 74 years, and decreases the number of required pack ...

  5. New lung cancer screening guidelines include heavy smokers ...

    www.aol.com/lung-cancer-screening-guidelines...

    A 2022 report from the American Lung Association indicated that only 5.8% of Americans had been screened for lung cancer and that in some states, rates were as low as 1%.

  6. Women and smoking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_and_smoking

    Among current female smokers, "the chance of dying from heart disease or lung cancer exceeds the chance of dying from breast cancer from 40 on (and does so by at least a factor of 5 after age 55)." [ 43 ] The habit becomes particularly crucial when women are also taking birth control because these two in concert increases, even more so, women's ...

  7. Squamous-cell carcinoma of the lung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squamous-cell_carcinoma_of...

    Squamous-cell carcinoma of the lung is closely correlated with a history of tobacco smoking, more so than most other types of lung cancer.According to the Nurses' Health Study, the relative risk of SCC is approximately 5.5, both among those with a previous duration of smoking of 1 to 20 years, and those with 20 to 30 years, compared to never-smokers. [2]

  8. Asian American women are getting lung cancer despite never ...

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    Lung cancer rates are dropping for every group except non-smoking Asian American women -- who have never smoked. Rates are actually increasing for this group. ... women with lung cancer may be ...

  9. Non-small-cell lung cancer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-small-cell_lung_cancer

    Adenocarcinoma of the lung is currently the most common type of lung cancer in "never smokers" (lifelong nonsmokers). [10] Adenocarcinomas account for about 40% of lung cancers. Historically, adenocarcinoma was more often seen peripherally in the lungs than SCLC and squamous-cell lung cancer, both of which tended to be more often centrally located.