Background: Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to understand gender and racial disparities and to examine how factors other than active smoking influence risk in different time periods and geographic regions. Methods and Findings: We pooled information on lung cancer incidence and/or death rates among self-reported never-smokers from 13 large cohort studies, representing over 630,000 and 1.8 million persons for incidence and mortality, respectively. We also abstracted population-based data for women from 22 cancer registries and ten countries in time periods and geographic regions where few women smoked. Our main findings were: (1) Men had higher death rates from lung cancer than women in all age a...
BackgroundAlthough lung cancer incidence rates according to smoking status, sex, and detailed race/e...
International audienceBackground: This study aims to provide new insights on the role of smoking pat...
PURPOSE: Using nationwide cancer incidence data, we examined whether the strength of the association...
Background: Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to underst...
Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to understand gender a...
BACKGROUND. Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to und...
Background: Few studies have directly measured the age-, sex-, and race-specifi c risks of lung canc...
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide and the most common cause of cancer morta...
[[abstract]]Objective: The rapid increase in lung cancer in nonsmoking women puzzled the public. The...
Though tobacco smoking is the primary risk factor for lung cancer, a significant fraction of lung ca...
Background: Recent case-control studies suggest that, given equal smoking exposure, women may have a...
While lung cancer has been the leading cause of cancer-related deaths for many years in the United S...
[[abstract]]Objective: Lung cancers that occur in never smokers differ from those that occur in smok...
SETTING: High lung cancer mortality is observed among female never-smokers in Hong Kong. OBJECTIVE: ...
Lung cancer rates in relation to smoking habits were studied in a cohort of 619,225 women traced ove...
BackgroundAlthough lung cancer incidence rates according to smoking status, sex, and detailed race/e...
International audienceBackground: This study aims to provide new insights on the role of smoking pat...
PURPOSE: Using nationwide cancer incidence data, we examined whether the strength of the association...
Background: Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to underst...
Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to understand gender a...
BACKGROUND. Better information on lung cancer occurrence in lifelong nonsmokers is needed to und...
Background: Few studies have directly measured the age-, sex-, and race-specifi c risks of lung canc...
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide and the most common cause of cancer morta...
[[abstract]]Objective: The rapid increase in lung cancer in nonsmoking women puzzled the public. The...
Though tobacco smoking is the primary risk factor for lung cancer, a significant fraction of lung ca...
Background: Recent case-control studies suggest that, given equal smoking exposure, women may have a...
While lung cancer has been the leading cause of cancer-related deaths for many years in the United S...
[[abstract]]Objective: Lung cancers that occur in never smokers differ from those that occur in smok...
SETTING: High lung cancer mortality is observed among female never-smokers in Hong Kong. OBJECTIVE: ...
Lung cancer rates in relation to smoking habits were studied in a cohort of 619,225 women traced ove...
BackgroundAlthough lung cancer incidence rates according to smoking status, sex, and detailed race/e...
International audienceBackground: This study aims to provide new insights on the role of smoking pat...
PURPOSE: Using nationwide cancer incidence data, we examined whether the strength of the association...