{"id":204395,"date":"2025-06-22T05:51:12","date_gmt":"2025-06-22T05:51:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/204395\/"},"modified":"2025-06-22T05:51:12","modified_gmt":"2025-06-22T05:51:12","slug":"so-many-young-women-whove-never-smoked-are-getting-lung-cancer-now-scientists-think-theyve-found-two-shocking-causes-and-reveal-what-to-look-out-for","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/204395\/","title":{"rendered":"So many young women who&#8217;ve never smoked are getting lung cancer. Now scientists think they&#8217;ve found two shocking causes &#8211; and reveal what to look out for"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">It was the end of GCSEs, and Amy Clark was celebrating with friends when she tumbled off a fence she had been sitting on and landed badly on her back.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">The 16-year-old from Bristol was fine at first, but over the next two years she suffered intermittent back pain, which she put down to the fall.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">After finishing school altogether, Amy decided it was time to get it checked out, booking an appointment with a back specialist, who referred her for a scan. The results showed her back was normal \u2013 but they also revealed something far more worrying: a suspicious speck on her right lung.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018I was whisked off to see the respiratory consultant,\u2019 Amy <a style=\"font-weight: bold;\" target=\"_self\" href=\"https:\/\/www.dailymail.co.uk\/yourmoney\/product-recalls\/index.html\" id=\"mol-270b6be0-4dd8-11f0-8d38-d73f2084b0c8\" rel=\"noopener\">recalls<\/a>, \u2018who told me they usually only see this sort of thing in long-term smokers and alcoholics \u2013 not in someone my age.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Doctors initially decided to monitor the lesion to see if it would resolve on its own. But eight months later, a follow-up scan and biopsy brought devastating news.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Amy had stage four lung <a style=\"font-weight: bold;\" target=\"_self\" href=\"https:\/\/www.dailymail.co.uk\/news\/cancer\/index.html\" id=\"mol-27048e10-4dd8-11f0-8d38-d73f2084b0c8\" rel=\"noopener\">cancer<\/a>. It had already spread from her right lung to her lymph nodes and back ribs, making it incurable. She was just one month shy of her 21st birthday.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018It was a massive shock \u2013 I\u2019d had no symptoms whatsoever. Cancer had never even popped into my head,\u2019 she said. \u2018I had always thought that lung cancer was something that long-term smokers got \u2013 and I\u2019d never touched a cigarette.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018I was concerned about my family and how they would take it. But I just couldn\u2019t stop thinking \u2013 how has this happened?\u2019<\/p>\n<p>   <img decoding=\"async\" id=\"i-9e991653061bf293\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/99570073-14832035-image-m-50_1750427068963.jpg\" height=\"711\" width=\"634\" alt=\"Amy Clark was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer just one month before her 21st birthday\" class=\"blkBorder img-share\" style=\"max-width:100%\" loading=\"lazy\" \/>   <\/p>\n<p class=\"imageCaption\">Amy Clark was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer just one month before her 21st birthday<\/p>\n<p>   <img decoding=\"async\" id=\"i-7c074947297d3ea2\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/99570163-14832035-image-m-49_1750427048024.jpg\" height=\"897\" width=\"634\" alt=\"Jules Fielder was 37 when she noticed a lump in her neck, with this leading to her diagnosis\" class=\"blkBorder img-share\" style=\"max-width:100%\" loading=\"lazy\" \/>   <\/p>\n<p class=\"imageCaption\">Jules Fielder was 37 when she noticed a lump in her neck, with this leading to her diagnosis<\/p>\n<p>   <img decoding=\"async\" id=\"i-b26813528a17efa5\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/99570071-14832035-image-a-47_1750427018706.jpg\" height=\"758\" width=\"634\" alt=\"Jules says she went to her doctor multiple times about pain in her back and elbow \u2013 only to be diagnosed with sciatica and tennis elbow\" class=\"blkBorder img-share\" style=\"max-width:100%\" loading=\"lazy\" \/>   <\/p>\n<p class=\"imageCaption\">Jules says she went to her doctor multiple times about pain in her back and elbow \u2013 only to be diagnosed with sciatica and tennis elbow<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">While shocking, Amy\u2019s story is not as unique as it may seem.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">She is one of tens of thousands of young people to develop lung cancer despite having never smoked \u2013 long thought to be the main trigger \u2013 and no genetic predisposition to the disease. It\u2019s a phenomenon that has left scientists both baffled and concerned.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">As smoking rates and related cancers decline, cases such as these are rising. Unusually, it\u2019s women who are most affected, making up nearly seven in ten cases.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Today, around 20 per cent of lung cancer diagnoses are in people who\u2019ve never smoked \u2013 and studies suggest that figure is set to rise. If so-called never-smoker lung cancer were a disease of its own, it would rank as the 8th leading cause of cancer death in the UK and 7th globally.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Now doctors believe that they may have found an explanation: air pollution. \u2018It\u2019s well established that there\u2019s a link between air pollution and lung cancer, but we think it may be especially important in patients who have never smoked,\u2019 explained Dr William Hill, a researcher at the Francis Crick Institute, London, and part of a team currently investigating the phenomenon. \u2018Our research found that these tiny solid particles in the air are inhaled and can cause an inflammatory response in the lungs, which can promote the development of cancer. And we have also found a link between high levels of these particles and increased rates of certain types of lung cancer in people who have never smoked.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">With nearly 48,000 people diagnosed each year, lung cancer remains the third most common cancer in the UK \u2013 and the leading cause of cancer-related death.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Today, about 85 per cent of lung cancer cases are still caused by smoking, when chemicals damage lung cells and trigger cancer-causing DNA mutations. But that percentage is falling.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">It\u2019s a trend consultant oncologist Dr Alexandros Georgiou began noticing at his clinic at Guy\u2019s and St Thomas\u2019 Hospital in south-east London \u2013 and one he decided to investigate.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">What Dr Georgiou\u2019s team discovered was that the proportion of patients without a history of smoking was increasing year by year. Just five per cent had never smoked in 2010. By 2021 it was 14 per cent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Another of the study\u2019s findings was similarly concerning: of these never-smoker lung cancer sufferers, the vast majority were female \u2013 at 68 per cent. And these patients were younger, on average, than those with smoking-related lung cancers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018This shifting demographic is partly due to the increasing prevalence of non-smokers in society, meaning the pool of non-smokers who could potentially get lung cancer is getting bigger,\u2019 said Dr Georgiou. \u2018But I don\u2019t think that fully explains the change that we\u2019re seeing.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">The difficulty with lung cancer in non-smokers, explains Professor Matt Evison, associate medical director for the Cancer Alliance, is that by the time it is caught, it tends to have already spread to other parts of the body.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018It\u2019s a difficult diagnosis because the common symptoms of lung cancer can have many other explanations,\u2019 he says. \u2018A cough, breathlessness, chest or upper back pain can all be put down to other, much more likely causes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018Lung cancer will rarely be the diagnosis for a patient who comes in with a cough.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">The other difficulty is that symptoms of lung cancer in non-smokers can be different to those typically associated with smoking-related lung cancer, and tend to appear later.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018In never-smokers, lung cancer is more likely to present as a dry cough than smoking-related cancer, which can cause patients to cough up blood,\u2019 says consultant clinical oncologist Dr James Wilson.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018Symptoms can also be more generalised and less specific to the lungs \u2013 like weight loss or fatigue. And as it progresses, it\u2019s more likely to present with breathlessness and pain in various areas of the body than in cancers caused by smoking.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018This is both because patients tend to be young and fit, and also because the type of cancer they tend to get \u2013 called adenocarcinoma \u2013 usually grow in the periphery of the lung. Cancer from smoking, meanwhile, causes tumours around the central airway that are more likely to bleed and cause patients to cough up blood or phlegm.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">As a result, patients and medics alike are too keen to dismiss symptoms, says Prof Evison. \u2018In medicine, we might have an idea in our head of the type of person who gets lung cancer,\u2019 he explains.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018Two people who come in with the same symptoms may have lung cancer put in very different places on the list of likely causes.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">This means around 90 per cent of never-smokers with lung cancer are diagnosed only when the disease is at an advanced stage and incurable.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">This was the experience of Jules Fielder, who was just 37 when she was diagnosed with incurable lung cancer \u2013 having never smoked. \u2018We\u2019d just got back from camping in the Isle of Wight and I was putting jewellery on in the bathroom when I noticed a lump at the base of my neck, by my collarbone,\u2019 says the mother-of-one.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">After a flurry of tests, Jules got a phone call on Christmas Eve from her doctor: she had lung cancer that had spread to her lymph nodes as well as her spine and pelvis.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018It was a hard hit,\u2019 she says. \u2018Especially being told that it was incurable \u2013 to know I can\u2019t do anything about it.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Jules says she went to her doctor multiple times about pain in her back and elbow in the months prior \u2013 only to be diagnosed with sciatica and tennis elbow. \u2018It was like putting a jigsaw together piece by piece. These were all signs that could have been picked up,\u2019 she adds.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Now experts say breakthrough findings pinpointing the cause of these cancers could help women like Jules and Amy in the future.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Numerous studies have linked air pollution to lung cancer, with a paper as early as 1950 blaming both outdoor pollutants and fossil fuels, but scientists couldn\u2019t explain exactly how \u2013 until now.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">One major risk factor for lung cancer in non-smokers is a mutation in the EGFR gene, which controls how cells grow and divide. When this mutates it can trigger uncontrolled growth and tumour formation \u2013 and it\u2019s found in nearly 20 per cent of adenocarcinomas in non-smoking women.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">These mutations aren\u2019t usually inherited, and lung cells carrying them typically lie dormant and harmless. However, Dr Hill says: \u2018We have found that air pollution seems to wake up these cells.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">While air pollution has decreased over the past half century, it was only in the last two decades that the UK saw most significant reduction in indoor wood burning, coal burning and vehicle exhaust within cities and towns. And as the gene mutations can occur as long as 30 years before the cancer develops, the number of cases is expected to continue to rise.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Experts say the good news is that if air pollution continues to fall, these cancer rates could decline too.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">However, others suggest hormones could play a role.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018Some have hypothesised that the increased risk of lung cancer in women who have never smoked could be hormonal \u2013 the oestrogen could have a role,\u2019 said Dr Robert Hynds, a senior research fellow in biology and cancer development at University College London. \u2018Others speculate that it could be due to women\u2019s higher susceptibility to autoimmune diseases, which causes inflammation in the body, potentially increasing cancer risk.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018It\u2019s not as simple as with tobacco smoking, which we know definitively causes lung cancer. We believe that air pollution \u2013 both indoor and outdoor \u2013 promotes lung cancer in some way, but it\u2019s not yet as well understood and studied.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">The recent findings bring researchers one step closer to identifying high-risk individuals and preventing the disease, says Dr Hill.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Treatments for gene-mutated lung cancers are already more advanced than for many other types. Instead of gruelling chemotherapy, patients are often given targeted drugs called tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Taken daily, these tablets block the faulty gene\u2019s activity, halting tumour growth and keeping the cancer at bay \u2013 often for years.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">For Amy, the targeted therapy has allowed her to more or less live her life as normal since her diagnosis. Now 26, she\u2019s still working, loves to walk, hike and hang out with her friends, and has even been to Glastonbury five times.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0I thought it was long Covid &#8211; it wasn&#8217;t   <img decoding=\"async\" id=\"i-f1b60d895ba26ef9\" src=\"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/99570065-14832035-image-m-48_1750427029697.jpg\" height=\"946\" width=\"634\" alt=\"In 2020, Mel Erwin, then 51, initially suspected her breathlessness was caused by long Covid\" class=\"blkBorder img-share\" style=\"max-width:100%\" loading=\"lazy\" \/>   <\/p>\n<p class=\"imageCaption\">In 2020, Mel Erwin, then 51, initially suspected her breathlessness was caused by long Covid<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">When she began suffering breathlessness and fatigue, in 2020, Mel Erwin, then 51, assumed it was long Covid \u2013 the lingering aftermath of a nasty bout of the virus she\u2019d caught months earlier.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">When she eventually went to her GP, she was sent for a chest X-ray and blood tests \u2013 and received a phone call the same afternoon.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018My bloods were fine but they\u2019d found a mass in my left lung,\u2019 Mel recalls. \u2018I asked if it was Covid or cancer \u2013 and he said it could be cancer.\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">The day after her 52nd birthday, Mel had half of her left lung removed. But two years later, a scan showed new lesions across both her lungs that were too small to biopsy.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">After another two years of monitoring, Mel was then diagnosed with advanced, incurable lung cancer.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">Now she\u2019s taking a targeted therapy, called Osimertinib, to inhibit the gene mutation that is causing the cancer to grow and spread. \u2018It\u2019s allowing me to live well, and I plan on living for decades,\u2019 said Mel, who\u2019s training for Sir Chris Hoy\u2019s fundraising charity bike ride Tour de 4.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">In the future, though, she hopes more people will be aware that it\u2019s possible to get lung cancer without a history of smoking \u2013 and to push if they have any symptoms of the disease.<\/p>\n<p class=\"mol-para-with-font\">\u2018Don\u2019t worry about making a nuisance of yourself \u2013 be a nuisance if something is wrong,\u2019 she urged.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"It was the end of GCSEs, and Amy Clark was celebrating with friends when she tumbled off a&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":204396,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[11],"tags":[381,92,105,257,16,15,2026],"class_list":{"0":"post-204395","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-health","8":"tag-bristol","9":"tag-dailymail","10":"tag-health","11":"tag-london","12":"tag-uk","13":"tag-united-kingdom","14":"tag-william-hill"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/pubeurope.com\/@uk\/114725459584550258","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/204395","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=204395"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/204395\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/204396"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=204395"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=204395"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=204395"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}