Lung Cancer Basics

When you know more about lung cancer, you can feel more in control of your health and help educate others. Learning about lung cancer can help you better understand the disease and its risk factors.

What Is Lung Cancer?

Lung cancer happens when cells in the lung change (or mutate). Most often, this is because of exposure to dangerous chemicals that we breathe. But lung cancer can also happen in people with no known exposure to toxic substances. Unlike normal cells, cancer cells grow uncontrollably and cluster together to form a tumor, destroying healthy lung tissue around them. Symptoms usually do not appear until cancer cells spread to other parts of the body and prevent other organs from functioning properly. At this point, it is harder to treat lung cancer.

Key Points

  • Lung cancer is the leading cancer killer in both men and women in the U.S.
  • Smoking poses the greatest risk, but there are others such as exposure to radon and air pollution.
  • Screening high risk individuals has the potential to dramatically improve lung cancer survival rates.
  • There are multiple types of lung cancer. Knowing this information can help inform treatment options.

Causes & Risk Factors

Exposure to dangerous, toxic substances—like smoke, radon gas and air pollution—can put you at risk for lung cancer. Take steps to reduce your risk and protect your lungs.
Learn more

Types of Lung Cancer

No two lung cancers are the same. There are different types and subtypes of lung cancer. Knowing this and whether or not a tumor has any biomarkers can help inform treatment options.
Learn more

Lung Cancer Symptoms & Diagnosis

How lung cancer is diagnosed differs from person to person. Understand what symptoms to talk to your doctor about and how screening, staging and biomarkers play a role in your overall diagnosis.
Learn more

Early Detection Is Important

Though lung cancer is common, many people don't know much about it or are afraid to learn. Lung cancer can go undiagnosed for a long time because symptoms usually do not appear until the cancer has spread. If you are over 55 and have a smoking history, you are at high risk and you may be eligible for lung cancer screening.

Research

Work is being done to find cures and better early detection
Learn more

Lung Cancer Facts

Get facts and statistics on mortality, prevalence, gender and racial differences, survival rate and burden.
Learn more

Page last updated: October 4, 2021

Freedom From Smoking Clinic
Jeffersonville, IN | Apr 12, 2022
SE-FY22-GA-Fayetteville-FFS Clinic-22739
Fayetteville, GA | Apr 12, 2022