Lung cancer rises 20 percent among Hong Kong women

New cases of lung cancer among women in Hong Kong have increased by 20 percent over the past two decades. Experts point to genetic factors and cooking fumes as contributors alongside smoking.

Rates of new lung cancer cases among Hong Kong women have risen by 20 per cent in the past two decades despite their smoking less than men. The disease remains the city’s most common and deadliest cancer and is still primarily caused by smoking. Herbert Loong Ho-fung, an associate professor in the department of clinical oncology of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said smoking is always a major risk factor. He added that some studies have found that some Chinese people, especially women, are genetically predisposed to developing lung cancer. Experts also cited exposure to cooking fumes in poorly ventilated kitchens or heavy use of cooking oil as risk factors. They emphasised that screening could help identify patients who were not exposed to traditionally recognised risk behaviours.

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Illustration of young non-smoking lung cancer patient enjoying high-quality healthy diet of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, with charts showing above-average scores and subtle pesticide exposure hints.
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Study of young lung cancer patients finds unexpectedly high diet-quality scores; researchers probe possible pesticide exposure

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Preliminary research from USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) annual meeting, found that non-smokers diagnosed with lung cancer before age 50 reported eating more fruits, vegetables and whole grains—and had higher overall Healthy Eating Index scores—than the U.S. population average. The researchers emphasized that the results do not prove diet causes lung cancer and said a possible explanation could involve environmental exposures such as pesticides, a hypothesis that requires direct testing.

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