In honor of Lung Cancer Awareness Month, CURE spoke with Dr. Daniel J. Boffa about how the understanding of lung cancer is evolving beyond smoking. In recognition of Lung Cancer Awareness Month, ...
November is Lung Cancer Awareness Month, a time to shine some light on one of the biggest cancer killers in the world. Local healthcare professionals say they see dozens of lung cancer patients every ...
In recent decades, lung cancer treatment has been transformed—new surgeries, new radiation techniques, and dramatically ...
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease’s development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research indicates.
The Community Conversations on Cancer seminar series, in partnership with the Detroit Public Library, allows Michigan residents to learn from researchers and physician-scientists DETROIT, June 12, ...
A severe case of COVID-19 or influenza could increase the risk of lung cancer later on, according to new research. Scientists discovered that serious viral infections can alter immune cells in the ...
A new study finds Black Medicare beneficiaries with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) continues to receive curative treatment at lower rates than White patients, highlighting ongoing ...
The Female Asian Nonsmoker Screening Study (FANSS) showed a 1.3% lung cancer detection rate among 1000 Asian women with no smoking history. The findings of FANSS, the largest lung cancer screening ...
The past 30 years have seen tremendous progress in our fundamental understanding of lung cancer and the development of new treatment strategies,” senior researcher Dr. Cary Gross, a professor at Yale ...
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease's development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research from UVA Health's Beirne ...
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