Lung cancer risk

Preventable cases

Lung cancer cases are preventable, UK, 2015

 

Caused by smoking

Lung cancer  cases linked to exposure to tobacco smoke, UK

Caused by occupation

Lung cancer cases caused by workplace exposures, UK, 2015

 

Caused by air pollution

Lung cancer cases caused by air pollution, UK, 2015

 

The estimated lifetime risk of being diagnosed with lung cancer is nearly 1 in 13 (7%) for females, and 1 in 14 (7%) for males born in 1961 in the UK. [1]

These figures take account of the possibility that someone can have more than one diagnosis of lung cancer in their lifetime ('Adjusted for Multiple Primaries' (AMP) method).[2]

References

  1. Lifetime risk estimates calculated by the Cancer Intelligence Team at Cancer Research UK 2023.
  2. Sasieni PD, Shelton J, Ormiston-Smith N, et al. What is the lifetime risk of developing cancer?: The effect of adjusting for multiple primaries  Br J Cancer, 2011.105(3): p.460-5

    About this data

    Data is for UK, past and projected cancer incidence and mortality and all-cause mortality rates for those born in 1961, ICD-10 C00-C14, C30-C32.

    Calculated by the Cancer Intelligence Team at Cancer Research UK, 2023 (as yet unpublished). Lifetime risk of being diagnosed with cancer for people in the UK born in 1961. Based on method from Ahmad et al. 2015, using projected cancer incidence (using data up to 2018) calculated by the Cancer Intelligence Team at Cancer Research UK and projected all-cause mortality (using data up to 2020, with adjustment for COVID impact) calculated by Office for National Statistics. Differences from previous analyses are attributable mainly to slowing pace of improvement in life expectancy, and also to slowing/stabilising increases in cancer incidence.

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    79% of lung cancer cases in the UK are preventable.[1]

    Lung cancer is associated with a number of risk factors.[2,3]

    Lung Cancer Risk Factors

      Increases risk Decreases risk
    'Sufficient' or 'convincing' evidence
    • Production of graphite (Acheson process)
    • Production of aluminium, iron and steel
    • Arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds[a]
    • Asbestos (all forms)
    • Beryllium (and compounds)
    • Bis(chloromethyl)ether; chloromethyl methyl ether (technical grade)
    • Cadmium (and compounds)
    • Chromium(VI) compounds
    • Household coal combustion emissions
    • Production of coal/coke
    • Coal-tar pitch
    • Diesel engine exhaust
    • Hematite mining
    • MOPP (vincristine-prednisone-nitrogen mustard-procarbazine mixture)
    • Nickel compounds
    • Outdoor air pollution (and particulate matter within)
    • Painting
    • Plutonium
    • Radon-222 and its decay products
    • Production of rubber
    • Crystalline silica dust
    • Soot
    • Sulphur mustard
    • Tobacco smoking
    • Environmental tobacco smoke
    • X-radiation, gamma-radiation
    • Welding fumes
    • Beta-carotene supplements (high dose, in smokers)
     
    'Limited' or 'probable' evidence
    • Strong inorganic acid mists
    • Production of art glass, glass containers and pressed ware
    • Household biomass fuel (primarily wood) combustion emissions
    • Working as a roofer (due to oxidized bitumens exposure)
    • Working with mastic asphalt (due to hard bitumens exposure)
    • Manufacture of carbon electrodes
    • alpha-Chlorinated toluenes with benzoyl chloride
    • Cobalt metal with tungsten carbide
    • Creosotes
    • Diazinon
    • Fibrous silicon carbide
    • Emissions from high-temperature frying
    • Hydrazine
    • Working as a non-arsenical insecticides sprayer
    • Printing processes
    • 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin
    • Fruits
    • Dietary carotenoids

    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR) classifications.

    a WCRF/AICR classifies evidence on inorganic arsenic in drinking water as convincing.

    See also

    Want to generate bespoke preventable cancers stats statements? Download our interactive statement generator.

    Find out more about the definitions and evidence for this data

    Learn how attributable risk is calculated

    References

    1. Brown KF, Rumgay H, Dunlop C, et al. The fraction of cancer attributable to known risk factors in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and the UK overall in 2015. British Journal of Cancer 2018.
    2. International Agency for Research on Cancer. List of Classifications by cancer sites with sufficient or limited evidence in humans, Volumes 1 to 118.  Accessed June 2017.
    3. World Cancer Research Fund / American Institute for Cancer Research. Continuous Update Project Findings & Reports. Accessed October 2016.
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    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies the role of this risk factor in cancer development.[1] 72% of lung cancer cases in the UK are caused by smoking - 71% caused by active smoking, and 1% caused by environmental tobacco smoke (ETS, also called second-hand smoke).[2

    An estimated 86% of lung cancer deaths in the UK are causes by tobacco smoking.[3]

    Lung cancer death risk is around 15 times higher in people who currently smoke compared with people who have never smoked, a cohort study of British males showed.[4]

    Lung cancer risk increases with both smoking duration and amount,[4] but duration has the most effect on risk: smoking one pack of cigarettes a day for 40 years is more hazardous than smoking two packs a day for 20 years.[5-7] Lung cancer risk in people who smoke is higher in those who start smoking at a younger age.[8-10] Lung cancer death risk is 37% higher per five years younger at smoking initiation, a cohort study of women showed.[11]

    Lung cancer risk is around 26 times higher in men who smoke 15-24 cigarettes per day, compared with people who have never smoked, a cohort study showed.[12] Lung cancer death risk is around 5 times higher in people who smoke of 1-4 cigarettes per day,[13] around 12 times higher in people who smoke 8-12 cigarettes per day; at least 24 times higher in people who smoke 25+ cigarettes per day;[4,14] and 39 times higher in people who smoke 42+ cigarettes per day,[14] all compared with people who have never smoked, cohort studies (some including only women or middle-aged people) have shown.

    Smoking is more strongly linked with risk of small cell lung cancer and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) than other lung cancer types, meta- and pooled analyses have shown.[15,16]

    Lung cancer risk is around twice as high for waterpipe tobacco smoking (smoking flavoured tobacco through a long pipe attached to a water bowl),  meta-analyses from mainly African and Asian studies have shown [17,18]; however confounding by cigarette smoking is possible.[17]

    UK portrait version shown here. Country versions, cancers caused by other risk factors, and landscape formats are available for free from our cancer risk publications.

    References

    1. International Agency for Research on Cancer. List of Classifications by cancer sites with sufficient or limited evidence in humans, Volumes 1 to 117. Accessed January 2017.
    2. Calculated by the Statistical Information Team at Cancer Research UK, 2018. Based on Brown KF, Rumgay H, Dunlop C, et al. The fraction of cancer attributable to known risk factors in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and the UK overall in 2015. British Journal of Cancer 2018. 
    3. Peto R, Lopez A, Boreham J, et al. Mortality from smoking in developed countries 1950-2005 (or later). March 2012.
    4. Doll R, Peto R, Boreham J, et al. Mortality from cancer in relation to smoking: 50 years observations on British doctors. Br J Cancer 2005;92(3):426-29.
    5. Cancer Research UK Statistical Information Team. Calculated using formula in Doll R, Peto R. Cigarette smoking and bronchial carcinoma: dose and time relationships among regular smokers and lifelong non-smokers. J Epidemiol Community Health 1978;32(4):303-13.
    6. Lubin JH, Caporaso NE. Cigarette Smoking and Lung Cancer: Modeling Total Exposure and Intensity. Cancer Epidem Biomar 2006;15(3):517-23.
    7. Flanders WD, Lally CA, Zhu B-P, et al. Lung Cancer Mortality in Relation to Age, Duration of Smoking, and Daily Cigarette Consumption: Results from Cancer Prevention Study II. Cancer Res 2003;63(19):6556-62.
    8. Wiencke JK, Thurston SW, Kelsey KT, et al. Early Age at Smoking Initiation and Tobacco Carcinogen DNA Damage in the Lung. J Natl Cancer I 1999;91(7):614-19.
    9. Peto R, Darby S, Deo H, et al. Smoking, smoking cessation, and lung cancer in the UK since 1950: combination of national statistics with two case-control studies. BMJ 2000;321(7257):323-29.
    10. Pirie K, Peto R, Reeves GK, et al. The 21st century hazards of smoking and benefits of stopping: a prospective study of one million women in the UK. Lancet 2012.
    11. Kenfield SA, Wei EK, Rosner BA, et al. Burden of smoking on cause-specific mortality: application to the Nurses' Health Study. Tob Control 2010;19(3):248-54.
    12. Darby S, Hill D, Auvinen A, et al. Radon in homes and risk of lung cancer: collaborative analysis of individual data from 13 European case-control studies. BMJ 2005;330(7485):223.
    13. Bjartveit K, Tverdal A. Health consequences of smoking 1-4 cigarettes per day. Tob Control 2005;14(5):315-20.
    14. Pope CA, Burnett RT, Turner MC, et al. Lung cancer and cardiovascular disease mortality associated with ambient air pollution and cigarette smoke: shape of the exposure-response relationships. Environ Health Persp 2011;119(11):1616-21.
    15. Khuder SA. Effect of cigarette smoking on major histological types of lung cancer: a meta-analysis. Lung Cancer 2001; 31(2-3):139-48.
    16. Pesch B, Kendzia B, Gustavsson P, et al. Cigarette smoking and lung cancer--relative risk estimates for the major histological types from a pooled analysis of case-control studies. Int J Cancer 2012;131(5):1210-9.
    17. Mamtani R, Cheema S, Sheikh J, et al. Cancer risk in waterpipe smokers: a meta-analysis. Int J Public Health. 2016 Jul 15.
    18. Waziry R, Jawad M, Ballout R, et al. The effects of waterpipe tobacco smoking on health outcomes: an updated systematic review and meta-analysis: Table 1. International Journal of Epidemiology 2016;:dyw021.
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    Smoking cessation has very significant health benefits, including improved life expectancy, compared with people who continue to smoke - even for people who have smoked for a long time, older people who smoke,[1-3] and people who quit smoking after lung cancer diagnosis.[4]

    Giving up smoking in middle age avoids most of the subsequent risk of lung cancer, cohort studies from around the world show.[1,5-7] In men, 15.9% of those who smoke all their lives die from lung cancer by age 75, compared with 9.9% of those who stop smoking by age 60, 6% of those who stop by age 50, 3% of those who stop by age 40, and 1.7% of those who stop by age 30.[1] In women, 9.5% of those who smoke all their lives die from lung cancer by age 75, compared with 5.3% of those who stop smoking by age 60, and 2.2% of those who stop by age 50.[1]

    Lung cancer risk, particularly squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) risk, is much lower in people who used to smoke compared with people who currently smoke, and the gap widens as time since quitting smoking increases, a meta-analysis showed.[8] Lung cancer risk in people who used to smoke who quit around 7 years previously is 43% lower compared with current smokers.[8] Lung cancer risk in ex-smokers who quit around 12 years previously is 72% lower compared with people who currently smoke.[8]

    Reducing cigarette intake rather than stopping may not be as beneficial: lung cancer risk is similar in people who smoke heavily (around 16-18 cigarettes per day) who halve their intake, compared with people who continue to smoke heavily.[9]

    References

    1. Peto R, Darby S, Deo H, et al. Smoking, smoking cessation, and lung cancer in the UK since 1950: combination of national statistics with two case-control studies. BMJ 2000;321(7257):323-29.
    2. Pirie K, Peto R, Reeves GK, et al. The 21st century hazards of smoking and benefits of stopping: a prospective study of one million women in the UK. Lancet 2012.
    3. Gellert C, Schöttker B, Brenner H. Smoking and all-cause mortality in older people: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Arch Int Med 2012;172(11):837-44.
    4. Parsons A, Daley A, Begh R, et al. Influence of smoking cessation after diagnosis of early stage lung cancer on prognosis: systematic review of observational studies with meta-analysis. BMJ 2010;340.
    5. Crispo A, Brennan P, Jockel KH, et al. The cumulative risk of lung cancer among current, ex- and never-smokers in European men. Br J Cancer 2004;91(7):1280-86.
    6. Brennan P, Crispo A, Zaridze D, et al. High Cumulative Risk of Lung Cancer Death among Smokers and Nonsmokers in Central and Eastern Europe. Am J Epidemiol 2006;164(12):1233-41.
    7. Halpern MT, Gillespie BW, Warner KE. Patterns of Absolute Risk of Lung Cancer Mortality in Former Smokers. J Natl Cancer I 1993;85(6):457-64.
    8. Lee PN, Forey BA, Coombs KJ. Systematic review with meta-analysis of the epidemiological evidence in the 1900s relating smoking to lung cancer. BMC Cancer. 2012 Sep 3;12:385.
    9. Tverdal A, Bjartveit K. Health consequences of reduced daily cigarette consumption. Tob Control 2006;15(6):472-80.
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    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies the role of this risk factor in cancer development.[1] 1% of lung cancer cases in the UK are caused by environmental tobacco smoke (ETS, also called second-hand smoke).[2

    An estimated 15% of lung cancer cases in never-smokers in the UK are linked to ETS.[2

    Lung cancer risk in people who have never smoked is 31% higher in those exposed to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS, also called second-hand smoke) at home or at work, compared with those not exposed to ETS, a meta-analysis showed.[3] Lung cancer risk in non-smokers is doubled in those with the highest workplace ETS exposure levels, versus those not exposed to ETS, a meta-analysis showed.[4]

    Small cell lung cancer risk in people who have never smoked is around three times as high in those exposed to ETS, compared with those not exposed to ETS, a meta- analysis showed.[3] Non-small cell lung cancer risk in people who have never smoked is 28% higher in those exposed to ETS, compared with those not exposed to ETS.[3]

    Lung adenocarcinoma in situ/minimally invasive adenocarcinoma (AIS/MIA) risk in people who have never smoked is 45% higher in those exposed to ETS, compared with those not exposed to ETS, a meta-analysis showed.[5]

    Lung cancer risk is probably not associated with ETS exposure in childhood, a meta-analysis showed.[3]

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    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies the role of this risk factor in cancer development.[1] 5% of lung cancer cases in the UK are caused by ionising radiation.[2]

    Residential radon

    An estimated 9% of lung cancer deaths in Europe are linked to indoor radon exposure.[3]

    Lung cancer risk is 16% higher per 100 becquerel/cubic metre (Bq/m3) increment in usual home radon level, a pooled analysis showed.[3] The average UK home usually contains 20 Bq/m3.[4] The effect of radon exposure on lung cancer risk does not appear to differ between people who smoke and those who don't.[3,5] But because the underlying risk of lung cancer is already much higher in people who smoke. Smokers exposed to radon have much higher lung cancer risks than do non-smokers exposed to radon.[3]

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    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies the role of this risk factor in cancer development.[1] 13% of lung cancer cases in the UK are caused by workplace exposures.[2]

    Asbestos

    An estimated 6-8% of lung cancer deaths in the UK each year are linked to asbestos exposure.[3,4]
     
    Lung cancer mortality is 77% higher in asbestos-exposed workers, compared with the general population, a meta-analysis showed.[4] Lung cancer mortality is 19-26 times higher in asbestos-exposed people who currently smoke, compared with asbestos-exposed people who have never smoked, a cohort study showed.[5-8]
     
    This reflects the higher risk of lung cancer death in people who currently smoke compared with people who have never smoked, but indicates that smoking and asbestos have a synergistic (combination effect stronger than sum of independent effects) effect on lung cancer development.[5-8] Age at asbestos exposure may modify the risk, but evidence is unclear, a systematic review showed.[9]
     
    Asbestos exposure in the UK (typically in construction and shipyard workers[10]) peaked around 1963 and decreased rapidly thereafter, it is estimated.[11] Asbestos is thought to cause as many lung cancer cases as mesothelioma cases, because lung cancer is much more common than mesothelioma.[3,4]
     
    Silica
    An estimated 0.02% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to silica (typically in glass manufacture).[3]

    Lung cancer risk is 68% higher in people who have been exposed to silica compared to those who have not been exposed, a meta-analysis of cohort studies showed. The industries of concern included mining, pottery and construction.[12]

    People with silicosis were around two and half times more likely to get lung cancer, while no effect was seen for people without silicosis who were exposed to silica, a meta-analysis of cohort studies showed.[12]

    Diesel engine exhaust

    An estimated 0.02% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to occupational exposure to diesel engine exhaust.[3]

    Lung cancer risk is 19-47% higher in professional drivers compared with the general population, meta-analyses have shown;[13, 14] however, the evidence does not allow a dose-response relationship to be established.[15] Lung cancer risk associated with diesel exhaust exposure varies markedly by occupation group; most evidence comes from highly-exposed workers including drivers and mechanics.[3,13,16]

    Working as a painter

    An estimated 0.01% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to working as a painter.[3]

    Lung cancer risk is 22-57% higher in painters compared with the general population, meta-analyses have shown.[17,19] Confounding by solvent exposure is possible, though evidence is unclear.[17,18]

    TCDD (2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin)

    An estimated 0.01% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to TCDD (typically in metal and pesticide production).[3]

    Lung cancer death risk is 22% higher in pesticide production workers compared with the general population, a meta-analysis showed.[20]

    Radon

    An estimated 0.01% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to working in sites of naturally-occurring high radon.[3]

    Mineral oils

    An estimated 0.01% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to mineral oil exposure (typically in metalworkers and printworkers).[3]

    Arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds

    An estimated 0.003% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to arsenic and inorganic arsenic compounds (typically in metal production, pesticide production/use, wood preservation).[3]

    Arsenic exposure increases lung cancer risk more in people who smoke than in those who don't.[23-25]

    Working as a welder

    An estimated 0.001% of lung cancers in Britain are linked to working as a welder.[3]

    Lung cancer risk is 26% higher in welders compared with the general population, a meta-analysis showed.[24]

    Other occupational exposures

    Lung cancer risk may be higher in rock wool and glass wool production workers (though not end-users), a meta-analysis found;[25] however residual confounding by smoking and asbestos exposure is likely.[25]

    Lung cancer risk is higher in iron and steel foundry workers, a meta-analysis showed.[26]

    UK portrait version shown here. Country versions, cancers caused by other risk factors, and landscape formats are available for free from our cancer risk publications.

    References

    1. International Agency for Research on Cancer. List of Classifications by cancer sites with sufficient or limited evidence in humans, Volumes 1 to 119. Accessed September 2017.
    2. Brown KF, Rumgay H, Dunlop C, et al. The fraction of cancer attributable to known risk factors in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and the UK overall in 2015. British Journal of Cancer 2018.
    3. Brown T, Darnton A, Fortunato L, et al. Occupational cancer in Britain: Respiratory cancer sites: larynx, lung and mesothelioma. Br J Cancer 2012;107(S1):S56-S70.
    4. McCormack V, Peto J, Byrnes G, et al. Estimating the asbestos-related lung cancer burden from mesothelioma mortality. Br J Cancer 2012;106(3):575-84.
    5. Frost G, Darnton A, Harding A-H. The Effect of Smoking on the Risk of Lung Cancer Mortality for Asbestos Workers in Great Britain (1971–2005). Ann Occup Hyg 2011;55(3):239-47.
    6. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Volume 83 (2004): Tobacco Smoke and Involuntary Smoking. France: IARC, 2004.
    7. Erren TC, Jacobsen M, Piekarski C. Synergy between asbestos and smoking on lung cancer risks. Epidemiology 1999;10(4):405-11.
    8. Lee PN. Relation between exposure to asbestos and smoking jointly and the risk of lung cancer. Occup Environ Med 2001;58(3):145-53.
    9. Kang D, Myung MS, Kim YK, et al. Systematic Review of the Effects of Asbestos Exposure on the Risk of Cancer between Children and Adults. Ann Occup Environ Med 2013;25(1):10.
    10. Rake C, Gilham C, Hatch J, et al. Occupational, domestic and environmental mesothelioma risks in the British population: a case-control study. Br J Cancer 2009;100(7):1175-83.
    11. Tan E, Warren N, Darnton AJ, et al. Projection of mesothelioma mortality in Britain using Bayesian methods. Br J Cancer 2010;103(3):430-36.
    12. Poinen-Rughooputh S, Rughooputh M, Guo Y, et al. Occupational exposure to silica dust and risk of lung cancer: an updated meta-analysis of epidemiological studies. BMC Public Health 2016;16(1).
    13. Lipsett M, Campleman S. Occupational exposure to diesel exhaust and lung cancer: a meta-analysis. Am J Public Health. 1999 Jul;89(7):1009-17.
    14. Tsoi CT, Tse LA. Professional drivers and lung cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Occup Environ Med 2012.
    15. Sun Y, Bochmann F, Nold A, et al. Diesel exhaust exposure and the risk of lung cancer-a review of the epidemiological evidence. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2014;11(2):1312-40.
    16. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Volume 105: Diesel and gasoline engine exhausts and some nitroarenes . France: IARC, 2012.
    17. Bachand A, Mundt KA, Mundt DJ, et al. Meta-analyses of occupational exposure as a painter and lung and bladder cancer morbidity and mortality 1950–2008. Crit Rev Toxicol 2010;40(2):101-25.
    18. Guha N, Merletti F, Steenland NK, et al. Lung cancer risk in painters: a meta-analysis. Environ Health Perspect. 2010 Mar;118(3):303-12.
    19. Chen R, Seaton A. A meta-analysis of painting exposure and cancer mortality. Cancer Detect Prev 1998;22(6):533-39.
    20. Jones DR, Sutton AJ, Abrams KR, et al. Systematic review and meta-analysis of mortality in crop protection product manufacturing workers. Occup Environ Med 2009;66(1):7-15.
    21. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Volume 83 (2004): Tobacco Smoke and Involuntary Smoking. France: IARC, 2004.
    22. Hertz-Picciotto I, Smith AH, et al. Synergism between occupational arsenic exposure and smoking in the induction of lung cancer. Epidemiology 1992;3(1):23-31.
    23. Putila JJ, Guo NL. Association of Arsenic Exposure with Lung Cancer Incidence Rates in the United States. PLoS ONE 2011;6(10):e25886.
    24. Ambroise D, Wild P, Moulin JJ. Update of a meta-analysis on lung cancer and welding. Scand J Work Environ Hea 2006;32(1):22-31.
    25. Lipworth L, La Vecchia C, Bosetti C, et al. Occupational exposure to rock wool and glass wool and risk of cancers of the lung and the head and neck: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Occup Environ Med 2009;51(9):1075-87.
    26. Rota M, Bosetti C, Boccia S, et al. Occupational exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and respiratory and urinary tract cancers: an updated systematic review and a meta-analysis to 2014. Arch Toxicol 2014;88(8):1479-90.
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    International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies the role of this risk factor in cancer development.[1]

    Outdoor air pollution

    8% of lung cancer cases in the UK are caused by air pollution.[2

    Lung adenocarcinoma risk is 40% higher per 10µg/m3 of PM2.5 air pollution, a meta-analysis showed.[3] Lung adenocarcinoma risk is 29% higher per 10µg/m3 of PM10 air pollution.[3] Lung cancer risk overall is associated only with PM2.5 (9% higher risk per 10µg/m3); the association with PM10 is not significant (95% CI 1.00-1.17).[3] Lung adenocarcinoma is less closely linked with smoking compared with other lung cancer types.

    Lung cancer death risk is higher in people living near major roads, a meta-analysis showed.[4] Though most evidence linking lung cancer risk with diesel exhaust emissions comes from studies of highly-exposed workers, IARC states diesel exhaust may increase lung cancer risk in the general public.[5]

    Indoor air pollution

    Lung cancer risk is around doubled in people who use coal in the home for cooking or heating, meta-analyses (primarily from China and Taiwan, where coals may be more harmful than those used in the UK) have shown.[6,7] Lung cancer risk is not associated with domestic coal use, a European case-control study showed.[8]

    References

    1. International Agency for Research on Cancer. List of Classifications by cancer sites with sufficient or limited evidence in humans, Volumes 1 to 119. Accessed September 2017.
    2. Brown KF, Rumgay H, Dunlop C, et al. The fraction of cancer attributable to known risk factors in England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and the UK overall in 2015. British Journal of Cancer 2018. 
    3. Hamra GB, Guha N, Cohen A, et al. Outdoor particulate matter exposure and lung cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.. Environ Health Perspect 2014;122(9):906-11.
    4. Chen H, Goldberg MS, Villeneuve PJ. A systematic review of the relation between long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and chronic diseases. Rev Environ Health 2008;23(4):243-97.
    5. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). IARC Monographs on the Evaluation of Carcinogenic Risks to Humans. Volume 105: Diesel and gasoline engine exhausts and some nitroarenes. France: IARC, 2012.
    6. Hosgood HD, Wei H, Sapkota A, et al. Household coal use and lung cancer: systematic review and meta-analysis of case–control studies, with an emphasis on geographic variation. Int J Epidemiol 2011;40(3):719-28.
    7. Kurmi OP, Arya PH, Lam KBH, et al. Lung cancer risk of solid fuel smoke exposure: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Eur Respir J 2012.
    8. Lissowska J, Bardin-Mikolajczak A, Fletcher T, et al. Lung Cancer and Indoor Pollution from Heating and Cooking with Solid Fuels: the IARC international multicentre case-control study in Eastern/Central Europe and the United Kingdom. Am J Epidemiol 2005;162(4):326-33.
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    Lung cancer risk is 82% higher in people whose sibling has/had lung cancer, and 25-37% higher in people whose parent has/had the disease, a meta-analysis showed.[1] The association is independent of smoking.[1]

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    Higher lung cancer risk in people with previous lung disease does not necessarily mean these diseases cause lung cancer. The associations may to an extent (though not entirely) reflect reverse causality (e.g. diseases caused by weakened immune system in early undiagnosed lung cancer), misdiagnosis (e.g. lung tumours misdiagnosed as other lung diseases), or detection bias (e.g. lung cancer more likely to be picked up in people undergoing testing/surveillance for other lung diseases).[1-3]

    Pneumonia

    Lung cancer risk is 43-57% higher in people with a history of pneumonia, with slightly smaller risk increase (35-36%) in people who have never smoked, a meta-analysis and pooled analysis of case-control studies have shown.[1,4] Lung cancer risk is increased in pneumococcal and community-acquired pneumonia.[5,6]

    Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) 

    Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a collection of smoking-related lung diseases including emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and chronic obstructive airways disease.

    Lung cancer risk is 104-144% higher in people with a history of emphysema, though there may be no association for people who have never smoked, meta- and pooled analyses have shown.[1,2]

    Lung cancer risk is 47-52% higher in ever-smokers with a history of chronic bronchitis; there is no association for people who have never smoked, meta- and pooled analyses have shown.[1,2]

    References

    1. Brenner DR, McLaughlin JR, Hung RJ. Previous Lung Diseases and Lung Cancer Risk: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. PLoS ONE 2011;6(3):e17479.
    2. Brenner DR, Boffetta P, Duell EJ, et al. Previous lung diseases and lung cancer risk: a pooled analysis from the International Lung Cancer Consortium. Am J Epidemiol 2012; 176(7):573-85.
    3. Denholm R, Schüz J, Straif K, et al. Is previous respiratory disease a risk factor for lung cancer? Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2014;190(5):549-59.
    4. Ibrahim EM, Kazkaz GA, Abouelkhair KM et al. Increased risk of second lung cancer in Hodgkin's lymphoma survivors: a meta-analysis. Lung 2013; 191(1):117-34).
    5. Zhan P, Suo L-j, Qian Q, et al. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection and lung cancer risk: A meta-analysis. Eur J Cancer 2011;47(5):742-47.
    6. Lin TY, Huang WY, Lin JC, et al. Increased Lung Cancer Risk Among Patients with Pneumococcal Pneumonia: A Nationwide Population-Based Cohort Study. Lung 2013.
    Last reviewed:

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    Acknowledgements

    We are grateful to the many organisations across the UK which collect, analyse, and share the data which we use, and to the patients and public who consent for their data to be used. Find out more about the sources which are essential for our statistics.