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Gender-Specific Differences of Lung Cancer

    Center for Gender-Specific Medicine
  • Even when adjusted for body size, women's lungs are smaller than those of men, although their hemoglobin levels are lower.
  • Residual volume and vital capacity is lower in females than in males.
  • In 2003, lung cancer will claim more lives than breast, prostate and colon cancers combined.
  • Men have a higher risk of squamous cell cancer. Women have a higher incidence of small cell lung cancer that spreads rapidly and has a poor prognosis.
  • Women's cancers are more likely to be peripheral while men's are more central, hindering early detection in women compared with men.
  • In 1987, lung cancer surpassed breast cancer as the chief malignancy killing American women (68,000 deaths in 2002).
  • Between 1950 and 1995, the mortality rate from lung cancer increased by 500 percent among American females.
  • Vulnerability of women to lung cancer is three times that of the same-aged male smokers.
  • 20 to 30% of lung cancers occur in women who are nonsmokers.
  • Women get lung cancer at younger ages, and are more likely to develop a more aggressive form of cancer than men.

Lung CancerJewish Hospital Medical Center East Center for Gender-Specific Medicine program materials are sponsored in part by an educational grant from Eli Lilly and Company.

For more information on the Gender-Specific differences of lung cancer, please call the Center for Gender-Specific Medicine at (502) 259-6414.

Click here to view the pdf version of the Gender-Specific Differences of Lung Cancer poster.