Lung Cancer: Complete Guide
Quick Facts
- Leading cause of cancer death worldwide
- Accounts for about 25% of all cancer deaths
- Smoking causes 85% of lung cancer cases
- Two main types: Non-small cell (85%) and small cell (15%)
- Early detection through screening can reduce mortality by 20%
- 5-year survival rate has improved to 23% overall
What is Lung Cancer?
Lung cancer is a type of cancer that begins in the lungs, typically in the cells lining the air passages. The lungs are two spongy organs in the chest that take in oxygen when you inhale and release carbon dioxide when you exhale.
Key Points
- Lung cancer is the second most common cancer in both men and women
- Early-stage lung cancer often has no symptoms
- Smoking is the primary risk factor, but non-smokers can also develop lung cancer
- Treatment advances have significantly improved outcomes in recent years
The lungs are divided into sections called lobes. The right lung has three lobes, while the left lung has two lobes. Cancer can start in any part of the lungs and may spread to lymph nodes or other organs.
Types of Lung Cancer
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) - 85% of cases
- Adenocarcinoma (40%): Most common type, often in outer lung areas, common in non-smokers
- Squamous Cell Carcinoma (25-30%): Usually in central lung areas near main airways
- Large Cell Carcinoma (10-15%): Can occur in any part of the lung, tends to grow quickly
Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) - 15% of cases
- Limited Stage: Cancer confined to one lung and nearby lymph nodes
- Extensive Stage: Cancer has spread beyond one lung
Other Rare Types
- Carcinoid tumors (1-2% of lung cancers)
- Adenosquamous carcinoma
- Sarcomatoid carcinoma
- Salivary gland carcinoma
Molecular Subtypes (Important for Treatment)
Based on genetic mutations and biomarkers:
- EGFR-mutated (10-15% in Western populations, higher in Asian populations)
- ALK-rearranged (3-5%)
- ROS1-rearranged (1-2%)
- BRAF-mutated (2-3%)
- MET exon 14 skipping (3-4%)
- RET-rearranged (1-2%)
- KRAS-mutated (25-30%)
- PD-L1 expression levels
Signs and Symptoms
Early Symptoms (May Be Subtle)
- Persistent cough that doesn't go away
- Cough that gets worse over time
- Chest pain that worsens with deep breathing, coughing, or laughing
- Hoarseness
- Unexplained weight loss
- Loss of appetite
- Fatigue and weakness
Advanced Symptoms
- Coughing up blood or rust-colored sputum (hemoptysis)
- Shortness of breath (dyspnea)
- Wheezing
- Recurrent respiratory infections (bronchitis, pneumonia)
- Swelling of face and neck (superior vena cava syndrome)
- Difficulty swallowing
- Bone pain (especially back, hips, ribs)
- Headaches
- Neurological symptoms (if spread to brain)
Paraneoplastic Syndromes
Symptoms caused by substances produced by the tumor:
- Hypercalcemia (high calcium levels)
- SIADH (syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone)
- Cushing syndrome
- Lambert-Eaton syndrome
- Digital clubbing
⚠️ When to Seek Immediate Medical Care
Contact your healthcare provider immediately if you experience:
- Coughing up significant amounts of blood
- Severe shortness of breath or chest pain
- Sudden onset of confusion or neurological symptoms
- Signs of blood clots (leg swelling, chest pain, difficulty breathing)
- High fever with productive cough (possible pneumonia)
Causes and Risk Factors
Primary Risk Factors
- Smoking: Causes 85% of lung cancers
- Risk increases with number of cigarettes and years smoked
- Quitting reduces risk, but remains elevated compared to never-smokers
- Cigars and pipes also increase risk
- Secondhand Smoke: Increases risk by 20-30%
- Radon Exposure: Second leading cause, responsible for 21,000 deaths annually
- Occupational Exposures:
- Asbestos (especially combined with smoking)
- Diesel exhaust
- Arsenic
- Chromium compounds
- Nickel compounds
- Beryllium
- Cadmium
- Coal products
- Air Pollution: Fine particulate matter (PM2.5)
- Previous Radiation Therapy: To chest area for other cancers
Other Risk Factors
- Personal or family history of lung cancer
- Genetic susceptibility (various gene polymorphisms)
- Pulmonary fibrosis
- COPD or emphysema
- HIV infection
- Dietary factors (low fruit and vegetable intake)
Diagnosis
Initial Evaluation
- Complete medical history and physical examination
- Assessment of symptoms and risk factors
- Smoking history quantification (pack-years)
Imaging Studies
- Chest X-ray: Often first test, but can miss small tumors
- CT Scan (Computed Tomography):
- More detailed than X-ray
- Can detect smaller nodules
- Helps determine size, location, and spread
- PET Scan (Positron Emission Tomography): Shows metabolic activity, helps with staging
- MRI (Brain): To check for brain metastases
- Bone Scan: If bone metastases suspected
Tissue Diagnosis (Biopsy)
- Bronchoscopy: Flexible tube through airways to obtain samples
- CT-guided needle biopsy: For peripheral lung lesions
- Endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS): For lymph node sampling
- Mediastinoscopy: Surgical procedure to sample mediastinal nodes
- Thoracentesis: If pleural effusion present
- Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS): When other methods unsuccessful
Molecular Testing
Essential for treatment planning in advanced NSCLC:
- EGFR mutations
- ALK rearrangements
- ROS1 rearrangements
- BRAF V600E mutation
- MET exon 14 skipping
- RET rearrangements
- KRAS G12C mutation
- NTRK fusions
- PD-L1 expression
- Tumor mutational burden (TMB)
Laboratory Tests
- Complete blood count (CBC)
- Comprehensive metabolic panel
- Liver function tests
- Calcium levels
- Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
Staging
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (TNM Staging)
| Stage | Description | 5-Year Survival Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 0 | Cancer in situ, only in top layers of cells | ~90% |
| Stage IA | Tumor ≤3cm, no lymph nodes | 68-92% |
| Stage IB | Tumor 3-4cm, no lymph nodes | 60% |
| Stage IIA | Tumor 4-5cm, no nodes OR smaller with N1 nodes | 53% |
| Stage IIB | Tumor 5-7cm, no nodes OR smaller with N1 nodes | 47% |
| Stage IIIA | Any size, N2 nodes OR large with N1 nodes | 36% |
| Stage IIIB | Any size, N3 nodes OR T4 with N2 nodes | 26% |
| Stage IIIC | Large tumor with N3 nodes | 13% |
| Stage IVA | Single distant metastasis | 10% |
| Stage IVB | Multiple distant metastases | ~5% |
Small Cell Lung Cancer Staging
- Limited Stage: Cancer confined to one hemithorax, can be encompassed in single radiation field
- Median survival: 16-24 months
- 5-year survival: 10-30%
- Extensive Stage: Cancer has spread beyond limited stage definition
- Median survival: 6-12 months
- 5-year survival: 1-5%
Treatment Options
Surgery
Primary treatment for early-stage NSCLC:
- Lobectomy: Removal of entire lobe (standard for early-stage)
- Segmentectomy/Wedge resection: Removal of part of lobe
- Pneumonectomy: Removal of entire lung (rarely needed)
- Sleeve resection: Removal and reconstruction of airway
- VATS or robotic surgery: Minimally invasive approaches
Radiation Therapy
- External Beam Radiation (EBRT): Standard approach
- Stereotactic Body Radiation (SBRT): For early-stage inoperable tumors
- Intensity-Modulated Radiation (IMRT): Precise targeting
- Proton Beam Therapy: Reduced dose to surrounding tissue
- Palliative radiation: For symptom control
Chemotherapy
For NSCLC:
- Platinum-based doublets (cisplatin or carboplatin plus):
- Pemetrexed (non-squamous)
- Paclitaxel
- Gemcitabine
- Vinorelbine
- Docetaxel
For SCLC:
- Etoposide + platinum (cisplatin or carboplatin)
- Alternative: Irinotecan + platinum
Targeted Therapy
For specific genetic mutations in NSCLC:
- EGFR inhibitors:
- Osimertinib (Tagrisso) - preferred first-line
- Erlotinib (Tarceva)
- Gefitinib (Iressa)
- Afatinib (Gilotrif)
- Dacomitinib (Vizimpro)
- ALK inhibitors:
- Alectinib (Alecensa) - preferred first-line
- Brigatinib (Alunbrig)
- Ceritinib (Zykadia)
- Crizotinib (Xalkori)
- Lorlatinib (Lorbrena)
- ROS1 inhibitors: Crizotinib, Entrectinib (Rozlytrek)
- BRAF inhibitors: Dabrafenib (Tafinlar) + Trametinib (Mekinist)
- MET inhibitors: Capmatinib (Tabrecta), Tepotinib (Tepmetko)
- RET inhibitors: Selpercatinib (Retevmo), Pralsetinib (Gavreto)
- KRAS G12C inhibitors: Sotorasib (Lumakras), Adagrasib (Krazati)
Immunotherapy
Checkpoint inhibitors for NSCLC and SCLC:
- PD-1 inhibitors:
- Pembrolizumab (Keytruda)
- Nivolumab (Opdivo)
- Cemiplimab (Libtayo)
- PD-L1 inhibitors:
- Atezolizumab (Tecentriq)
- Durvalumab (Imfinzi)
- CTLA-4 inhibitor: Ipilimumab (Yervoy) - in combination
Treatment by Stage
Early-Stage NSCLC (I-II)
- Surgery preferred when feasible
- Adjuvant chemotherapy for high-risk features
- SBRT for medically inoperable patients
Locally Advanced NSCLC (III)
- Concurrent chemoradiation
- Durvalumab maintenance after chemoradiation
- Surgery for selected patients
Advanced/Metastatic NSCLC (IV)
- Targeted therapy if actionable mutation present
- Immunotherapy ± chemotherapy based on PD-L1 expression
- Chemotherapy alone if no targetable mutations and low PD-L1
Small Cell Lung Cancer
- Limited stage: Concurrent chemoradiation + prophylactic cranial irradiation
- Extensive stage: Chemotherapy + immunotherapy (atezolizumab or durvalumab)
Prognosis and Survival Rates
Factors Affecting Prognosis
- Stage at diagnosis (most important factor)
- Histologic type (NSCLC vs SCLC)
- Molecular characteristics (driver mutations)
- Performance status
- Weight loss
- Presence of symptoms
- Response to treatment
- Smoking status
Overall Survival Statistics
- Overall 5-year survival rate: 23%
- Localized disease: 61%
- Regional spread: 33%
- Distant metastases: 6%
Important Note on Statistics
Survival statistics are averages based on large groups. Individual prognosis depends on many factors, and newer treatments are continually improving outcomes. These statistics may not reflect recent treatment advances.
Prevention
Primary Prevention
- Never smoke: Most effective prevention strategy
- Quit smoking: Reduces risk at any age
- Risk decreases 30-50% after 10 years of quitting
- Never returns to never-smoker levels
- Avoid secondhand smoke
- Test home for radon: Mitigation if levels >4 pCi/L
- Occupational safety: Follow safety protocols for hazardous materials
- Healthy diet: Rich in fruits and vegetables
- Regular exercise
- Limit alcohol consumption
⚠️ Beta-Carotene Warning
High-dose beta-carotene supplements may increase lung cancer risk in smokers. Get nutrients from food sources rather than supplements.
Screening Guidelines
Current USPSTF Recommendations (2021)
Annual low-dose CT screening for individuals who meet ALL criteria:
- Age 50-80 years
- 20+ pack-year smoking history
- Currently smoke or quit within past 15 years
- No symptoms of lung cancer
Benefits of Screening
- 20% reduction in lung cancer mortality
- Detection at earlier, more treatable stages
- Opportunity for smoking cessation counseling
Risks of Screening
- False-positive results (95% of positive screens are false positives)
- Overdiagnosis of indolent cancers
- Radiation exposure
- Anxiety from abnormal findings
- Complications from follow-up procedures
Living with Lung Cancer
During Treatment
- Managing treatment side effects
- Pulmonary rehabilitation
- Nutritional support
- Pain management
- Oxygen therapy if needed
- Emotional and psychological support
- Smoking cessation support
Follow-up Care
- Regular CT scans (frequency depends on stage and treatment)
- Symptom monitoring
- Management of long-term effects
- Surveillance for recurrence
- Continued smoking cessation support
Quality of Life Considerations
- Breathlessness management techniques
- Energy conservation strategies
- Exercise as tolerated
- Support groups and counseling
- Advance directive planning
- Palliative care integration
Frequently Asked Questions
Can non-smokers get lung cancer?
Yes, about 10-20% of lung cancers occur in never-smokers. Risk factors include radon exposure, secondhand smoke, air pollution, occupational exposures, and genetic factors. Lung cancer in never-smokers is more likely to have targetable mutations.
What's the difference between NSCLC and SCLC?
NSCLC (85% of cases) grows more slowly and includes several subtypes. SCLC (15% of cases) grows rapidly, spreads quickly, and is strongly associated with smoking. Treatment approaches differ significantly between the two types.
How effective is immunotherapy for lung cancer?
Immunotherapy has revolutionized lung cancer treatment. Some patients with high PD-L1 expression achieve long-term responses. About 20-30% of advanced NSCLC patients respond to immunotherapy, with some achieving durable remissions.
Should former smokers still get screened?
Yes, if you meet the criteria (quit within 15 years, 20+ pack-year history, age 50-80). Risk remains elevated for many years after quitting, making screening valuable for early detection.
What is liquid biopsy?
Liquid biopsy is a blood test that can detect tumor DNA circulating in the bloodstream. It's increasingly used to identify genetic mutations, monitor treatment response, and detect resistance mechanisms without needing tissue biopsy.
Can lung cancer be cured?
Early-stage lung cancer can often be cured with surgery. The cure rate depends on stage: Stage I has cure rates of 60-80%, while advanced stages are rarely cured but can be controlled with treatment, sometimes for years.
What are lung nodules?
Lung nodules are small spots on the lung seen on imaging. Most (>95%) are benign. Size, growth rate, and other features help determine if a nodule needs further evaluation. Nodules under 6mm rarely require immediate action.
Related Topics
Medical Disclaimer
This information is for educational purposes only and should not replace professional medical advice. Always consult with qualified healthcare providers for diagnosis and treatment decisions. Lung cancer treatment is rapidly evolving, and newer options may be available.
Sources
- National Cancer Institute. Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment (PDQ) - Health Professional Version. Updated January 2026.
- American Cancer Society. Lung Cancer Statistics. 2026.
- NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines. Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. Version 1.2026.
- US Preventive Services Task Force. Lung Cancer Screening Guidelines. JAMA. 2021.
- Siegel RL, et al. Cancer Statistics, 2026. CA Cancer J Clin. 2026.
- ASCO Guidelines. Systemic Therapy for Stage IV NSCLC. 2025 Update.
- IASLC Staging Manual in Thoracic Oncology. 9th Edition. 2024.