Can I get lung cancer if I’ve never smoked?

It’s a common misconception that someone who gets lung cancer must be a smoker or a former smoker.

In Australia, about 90 per cent of lung cancer cases in males and 65 per cent in females are estimated to be a result of tobacco smoking. The UK’s NHS says if you smoke more than 25 cigarettes a day, you are 25 times more likely to get lung cancer than a non-smoker. However, 28 per cent of cases are in people who don’t smoke.

To mark November’s Lung Cancer Awareness Month, Paula Chadwick, chief executive of the Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation (RCLCF), says: “Lung cancer is a hugely misunderstood disease. It’s still so intrinsically linked to smoking that many people remain under the misconception that only people who smoke, or used to smoke, can get lung cancer. However, many lung cancers are not caused by smoking.”

Indeed, Roy Castle, a UK TV entertainer who gave his name to the charity, died of lung cancer in 1994, yet he had never smoked.

“If you have lungs, you can get lung cancer,” stresses Ms Chadwick, “so it’s imperative that anyone experiencing symptoms seeks help and pushes for thorough investigation regardless of their smoking history.”

And Dr Rachel Orritt, Cancer Research UK (CRUK) health information manager, adds: “Most cases of lung cancer are in people aged 50 and over and are caused by smoking, but the disease can affect anyone, including people who’ve never smoked.”

CRUK says other risk factors for lung cancer include exposure to second-hand tobacco smoke and substances such as asbestos, silica and diesel exhaust fumes, which people may come across at work, outdoor air pollution (which is thought to cause 8 per cent of UK lung cancer cases), previous lung diseases such as COPD (chronic obstructive airways disease), exposure to naturally occurring radon gas, or a family history of lung cancer.

However, Dr Orritt warns: “Lung cancer doesn’t always have a ‘preventable’ cause, and it’s not usually possible to know exactly what caused an individual’s cancer.”

So even if you’re not a smoker or never have been, if you develop symptoms such as feeling short of breath, a long-lasting or changed cough, a repeated or long-lasting chest infection, a hoarse voice, chest or shoulder pain, and/or coughing up blood, it’s important to get them checked by a doctor.

A long-standing cough needs to be checked out by a doctor. (Alamy/PA)

Other, more general, symptoms include appetite loss, feeling tired for no reason, losing weight without trying to, clubbing of the fingers (where the tips of your fingers swell around your nail), difficulty swallowing, or a swelling in your face or neck. Again, while it’s most likely they’re nothing sinister, they should be checked out.

Around a third of people with lung cancer are diagnosed at emergency departments, and by this point the cancer is usually advanced and the majority of them are facing an incurable diagnosis. But being aware of the symptoms earlier – and understanding that not being a smoker doesn’t mean you can’t get lung cancer – could mean an earlier diagnosis in more cases.

“Some of the symptoms are quite vague, so it can be tempting to put it down to another health condition or to just getting older,” says Dr Orritt. “But it’s important to get your doctor’s advice about anything that’s not normal for you, or that hasn’t gone away.

“It probably won’t be cancer, but if it is, spotting it at an early stage means that treatment is more likely to be successful.”

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The charities say that as well as standard treatments such as chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery, there are now newer treatments for lung cancer. This includes targeted therapy for the most common form of the disease, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and patients with specific gene mutations are given targeted drugs.

Another new treatment is immunotherapy, again for NSCLC, which works by helping the immune system recognise and destroy cancer cells. Immunotherapy may also be used for extensive stage small cell lung cancer, which is the other type of lung cancer.

Do you know of a non-smoker who was diagnosed with lung cancer? Why not share your experience in the comments section below?

Also read: Almost 50 per cent of cancers are due to lifestyle, study finds

– With Lisa Salmon

PA Media
PA Media
PA Media is a leading creator of breaking news and topical articles with more than 150 years’ experience of newsgathering.
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