Severe COVID or flu may raise lung cancer risk years later

New research indicates that severe cases of COVID-19 or influenza can alter lung immune cells, potentially increasing cancer risk months or years afterward. The study, conducted by scientists at the University of Virginia, highlights the role of chronic inflammation in this process and emphasizes vaccination as a preventive measure. Findings suggest closer monitoring for affected patients to enable early detection.

Researchers from UVA Health's Beirne B. Carter Center for Immunology Research and the UVA Comprehensive Cancer Center have uncovered links between severe respiratory infections and heightened lung cancer risk. Led by Jie Sun, PhD, from UVA School of Medicine, the team examined how infections like COVID-19 and influenza affect lung health over time.

The study, published in the journal Cell, analyzed both mouse models and human patient data. In mice, severe lung infections led to changes in immune cells such as neutrophils and macrophages, fostering a persistent inflammatory environment that supports tumor growth. These alterations also impacted epithelial cells in the lungs and air sacs. Human data showed a 1.24-fold increase in lung cancer diagnoses among those hospitalized for COVID-19, independent of smoking history or other comorbidities.

"A bad case of COVID or flu can leave the lungs in a long-lasting 'inflamed' state that makes it easier for cancer to take hold later," Sun stated. He noted that vaccination largely prevents these harmful changes by enabling a more effective immune response and reducing infection severity.

Mild infections did not elevate risk and even showed a slight decrease in lung cancer incidence. However, the researchers urge enhanced surveillance for survivors of severe viral pneumonia, especially those with smoking histories. "These findings have important immediate implications for how we monitor patients after severe respiratory viral infection," said collaborator Jeffrey Sturek, MD, PhD.

The work suggests that vaccines may offer indirect protection against cancer by averting severe illness fallout. Sun and colleagues aim to develop targeted prevention and treatment strategies for infection-related lung cancer.

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Scientists in a lab examining virus models linking co-infections to long COVID symptoms like fatigue and brain fog.
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Researchers explore role of co-infections in long COVID symptoms

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A team of microbiologists suggests that infections occurring alongside SARS-CoV-2 may contribute to some cases of long COVID, potentially by reactivating latent pathogens such as Epstein–Barr virus or altering the course of tuberculosis. Their perspective, published in eLife, stresses that this remains a hypothesis and calls for large studies and better animal models to test whether these co-infections help drive persistent symptoms like fatigue and brain fog.

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco have identified how aging lungs contribute to severe flu and COVID-19 outcomes in older adults. Their study shows that lung fibroblasts trigger excessive inflammation, forming damaging clusters of immune cells. The findings, published in Immunity on March 27, suggest potential new treatments.

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Researchers analyzing immune cells from people with long COVID have identified a distinct molecular state in CD14+ monocytes—labeled “LC-Mo”—that was more prevalent among patients whose initial COVID-19 illness was mild to moderate and that tracked with reported fatigue and respiratory symptoms, along with higher levels of inflammatory signaling molecules in blood plasma.

Mayo Clinic researchers have mapped a molecular circuit in alveolar type 2 lung cells that helps determine whether they rebuild tissue or fight infection. The study, published Oct. 14, 2025, in Nature Communications, suggests new paths for regenerative approaches in chronic lung conditions such as pulmonary fibrosis and COPD.

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Researchers at the Salk Institute have developed a detailed epigenetic catalog of human immune cells, showing how genetics and life experiences influence immune responses differently. The study, published in Nature Genetics, analyzed samples from 110 diverse individuals to distinguish inherited from environmental epigenetic changes. This work could lead to personalized treatments for infectious diseases.

A randomized trial shows that administering cancer immunotherapy before 3pm can nearly double survival time for patients with non-small cell lung cancer. Researchers found significant benefits from aligning treatment with circadian rhythms during the initial cycles. This marks the strongest evidence yet for chronotherapy in oncology.

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An international team led by ETH Zurich and including researchers in Japan has used a new high‑resolution imaging technique to watch, live, as influenza viruses penetrate human cells. The work shows that cells actively engage with the virus, helping to draw it inside in a process that resembles surfing along the cell membrane, and could inform the development of targeted antiviral therapies.

 

 

 

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