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Disease & Conditions >>> Lung Cancer Articles & News
Women And Lung CancerLung cancer is catching up with more and more women. The disease, which is fatal for 86 percent of its victims within five years of a diagnosis, is now the leading cause of cancer death among women. Yet the disease is as preventable as it is deadly: Nearly 90 percent of lung cancer cases are smoking-related. For the country's 23 million female smokers, the news keeps getting worse. Researchers are finding that the effects of tobacco seem to be far more damaging to women than to men. Last year, scientists at the University of Pittsburgh discovered that a gene that accelerates lung cancer growth is more active in females. The findings might explain why women are one and a half times more likely than men to develop lung cancer, even when they smoke fewer cigarettes over a shorter period of time. SmokingWomen smoke because girls smoke -- more than 80 percent of smokers start using cigarettes before the age of 18. Each day, some 3,000 youngsters become regular smokers; it's estimated that close to 1,000 of them will die from smoking-related illnesses. And high school seniors are continuing to use cigarettes in record numbers: One in three is now a smoker. Although teen boys traditionally smoke more than girls do, that gap has all but disappeared. In fact, some 1.5 million teen girls are smokers, a number that's "outrageously high," according to Susan Moses, the deputy director of the Center for Health Communication at the Harvard School of Public Health.Many women who smoke sporadically don't consider themselves smokers at all -- despite the ever-present pack of cigarettes in their handbags. These social smokers take a few quick drags between fetching the dry cleaning and the kids' prescriptions or smoke three or four cigarettes when they go out with friends. But "there's really no safe level of smoking," says Virginia Ernster, Ph.D., scientific editor for the U.S. Surgeon General. And "social smoking can lead to regular smoking, because women don't even realize that they're addicted until it's too late." QuittingNicotine-replacement therapies--patches, gums, nasal inhalers--that work for men "aren't that effective for women," Kenneth Perkins, Ph.D., a psychologist at the University of Pittsburgh. Instead, antidepressants such as Zyban, which also inhibits postcessation weight gain, "are far better for women," he says.
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