.....

RE Library Home

Search Library

Add This Library
To Your Web Site

Real Estate Forum

Advertise With Us

Submit Your Articles
To This Library

Library Site Map

Count Cigarettes For Lung Cancer Risk - Cancer Links - 1/1/2003 - Health Asbestos Asbestosis Mesothelioma Lung Cancer

Count cigarettes for lung cancer risk

Wednesday, March 19, 2003 Posted: 3:53 PM EST (2053 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Smokers and ex-smokers soon will be able to predict their risk of lung cancer by using a new formula that counts how long and how much they smoked, and how long since they kicked the habit.

Scientists hope the formula will help people decide if they really want to try a controversial test to detect early-stage lung cancer.

The calculation, published in this week's Journal of the National Cancer Institute, shows a wide variation in risk.

Consider a 51-year-old woman who smoked a pack a day since she was 14 until stopping nine years ago. The formula puts her chances of getting lung cancer in the next 10 years at less than 1 in 100.

Compare a 68-year-old man who smoked two packs a day since he was 18 and hasn't yet quit. He has a 1 in 7 chance of lung cancer by his 78th birthday if he keeps puffing. If he quit smoking today, the risk drops slightly, to 1 in 9.

The formula works only for certain people -- those older than 50, who smoked at least half a pack a day for at least 25 years -- because it's based on a study that tracked cancer development in just those people.

Researchers from New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center created the formula and posted an easy-to-use version for consumers on a Web site. Doctors have used a similar model for years that calculates age, family medical history and other factors to predict a woman's risk of getting breast cancer.

But for lung cancer, expected to kill 157,000 Americans this year, doctors could give only vague advice: Smoking is the chief cause; heavy smokers have the highest risk; and that risk drops with each year that passes since kicking the habit.

The new formula will help doctors "be more specific now about who is at greatest risk," said Dr. Tom Glynn of the American Cancer Society, who praised the research.

That's particularly important as more people consider getting those aggressively advertised, but still unproven, spiral CT scans to hunt early lung cancer, Glynn said.

Only 15 percent of lung cancer sufferers survive five years, mainly because the disease usually is diagnosed very late. There is no proven screening test so far.

The National Cancer Institute is studying whether spiral CT scans, which view the lungs at various angles, could improve survival by spotting tumors early. There's no answer yet, and the scans do have a big problem: Up to half detect harmless scar tissue or some other benign lump that requires a risky biopsy or other follow-up testing.

Lung specialists see many patients "wracked by anxiety and concern about what may be in their future" because of ambiguous CT results, said Dr. Peter Bach, Sloan-Kettering's lead researcher. "A lot of chest physicians, I believe, would welcome a way of helping patients up front decide whether they should have this test in the first place."

First, Bach had to prove there is measurable variation in risk. He turned to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, which in the 1990s performed one of the best studies ever to track lung cancer development in 18,000 heavy smokers and ex-smokers. Bach used that data to determine the effects of age, sex, smoking history and exposure to cancer-causing asbestos.

He created a model that, while not perfect, largely accurately predicted cancer development among the Hutchinson study participants and among people being screened for lung cancer at the Mayo Clinic.

It's not foolproof, Bach cautioned. Nor does the formula say whether a person should have a CT scan.

Instead, people will have a prediction of risk based on data that they can use to make health-care decisions, agreed the cancer society's Glynn -- who encouraged users of the Web site to discuss the prediction with their doctor to ensure they interpret it correctly.

Some people will find a 15 percent risk of cancer so worrisome that they race for a CT scan, Glynn noted, while others might say, "That's 1 in 7, and I'm going to be one of the six" who stays well.

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.

 


 

CNN - Ovarian cancer: It's less common than you think - September ...

--   [CNN]

CNN.com - Count cigarettes for lung cancer risk - Mar. 19, 2003

--   [CNN]

seer.cancer.gov

--   A program of the National Cancer Institute, SEER is a source of information on cancer incidence and...

ALCASE - Alliance for lung cancer advocacy, support, and education

--   ALCASE is the only nonprofit organization dedicated solely to helping people with lung cancer improve...

Lung Cancer -- adenocarcinoma, lung cancer symptoms, squamous cell ...

--   Category: Regional > Asia > India > Health > Publications

Canadian Cancer Society/Société canadienne du cancer

--   Category: Regional > North America > ... > Health > Conditions and Diseases

Canadian Cancer Society/Soci??canadienne du cancer

--   Community-based organization of volunteers with the mission of eradicating cancer and enhancing the...

Cancer Research UK: the UK's leading cancer charity

--   Funding world-class research and training to improve cancer treatment and prevention, and providing...

MayoClinic.com - Lung cancer

--   Includes a description of this disease, its symptoms, causes, risk factors, diagnosis, treatment and...

cancer information website,leukemia information library, colon ...

--   In-depth information on cancer for health care professionals and patients.

Cancerpage - cancer information & community

--   Information and community resources including chat rooms, message boards, physician directory and...

Colorectal Cancer -- colon cancer, symptoms of colon cancer ...

--   Information including symptoms, diagnosis, staging, treatment and clinical trials.

Scientific Illustration, images of: cancer, SARS, AIDS, hepatitis ...

--   Medical, biological & general illustrations

Cancer Forums - Forum for discussions about breast cancer, lung ...

--   Online discussions on various types of cancers. Includes topics such as coping, support, clinical...

Cancer: health and medical information about cancer detection and ...

--   Presents information such as prevention and treatment side-effects. Also gives resources including...

Cancer information and cancer resources from Cancersource.com

--   Provides information about prevention, detection, diagnosis, treatment and symptom management. Offers...

medline literature search, information on lung cancer, forum colon ...

--   Provides links, a forum and information primarily from the National Cancer Institute sources.

National Cancer Institute - www.cancer.gov Home Page

--   The US National Institute of Health's cancer research wing.

H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute

--   A National Cancer Institute designated Cancer Center at University of South Florida. Extensive informati...

Support for Cancer Patients - The Cancer Information Network

--   A physician directed website for cancer patients, their families, and caregivers. Your starting point...

 


Related Articles:
Asbestosis and Mesothelioma - Causes Of Asbestosis | Home Was No Haven
Mesothelioma And Asbestos Disease Treatment Options - Lawyer Links | Asbestos Victims Under Attack by Proposed Asbestos Legislation - Asbestos Links
 

Links text Copyright © Asb Mesothelioma. Article presentation format, categories, and content management system Copyright © Nemmar.com.

.....


Copyright © 1990-2007 All Rights Reserved - Terms and Conditions Our copyright is very strictly enforced!
Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape