Cause
Most
lung cancer is caused by smoking. Over 85% of lung
cancers are related to smoking.2 Cancer-causing
substances (carcinogens) in tobacco smoke damage lung cells. Over time, these
damaged cells may develop into lung cancer.
If you are a smoker,
the risk of getting lung cancer is related to how long you have smoked and how
many cigarettes you smoke each day.3 Quitting smoking
reduces your risk for getting cancer, and your risk continues to go down as
long as you do not smoke. Even cutting down how much you smoke may reduce your
risk (but not as much as quitting completely).4
If you live with a smoker, you have 2 to 3 times the risk of developing
lung cancer compared with a person who lives in a nonsmoking
environment.5 About 25% of nonsmokers who develop lung
cancer probably get it from being exposed to secondhand smoke.3
Studies show that men and women have a similar
risk of lung cancer.6 But the chemicals in tobacco
smoke may affect men and women differently.
Exposure to other
harmful substances, such as
asbestos, radioactive dust, or
radon, increases the risk for lung cancer. Exposure to
radiation such as X-rays may also increase risk.7