Saturday, January 03, 2026

Faridabad oncologist warns ‘lung cancer rising among women under 50’, even in those who never smoked a cigarette

 Women under 50, even those who don’t smoke, are seeing a rise in lung cancer cases. Oncologist stresses recognising warning signs and early evaluation.

Lung cancer is quietly rewriting its own rulebook. Once labelled an elderly male smoker’s disease, it is now increasingly affecting women under 50, many of whom have never smoked a cigarette in their lives. Across several countries, lung cancer rates in younger women now match or even exceed those in men of the same age group. This trend cannot be explained by smoking alone, and that is what makes it worrying. 

According to 2025 statistics from the American Cancer Society, lung cancer among women under 65 surpassed that of men for the first time in 2021. Overall, cancer incidence among individuals aged 0 to 49 has historically been higher in females, primarily due to breast cancer. 

In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Sunny Jain, Senior Consultant and Head of Medical Oncology at Accord Super Speciality Hospital, Faridabad, NCR, shares insights on the rising trend of lung cancer among women under 50, along with early warning signs and preventive measures.

Why lung cancer in women under 50 rising

“Modern lifestyles and environments are playing a decisive role in the rising incidence of lung cancer among women,” says Dr Sunny. “Air pollution, particularly fine particulate matter that penetrates deep into the lungs, is now a proven cause of lung cancer. In Indian cities, pollution levels routinely exceed safe limits," he adds.

According to Dr Sunny, at home, prolonged exposure to kitchen smoke from biomass fuels, poor ventilation, and passive smoking continues to put women at risk. Add to this changing smoking habits, like increased use of filtered and light cigarettes that drive cancer to the outer parts of the lung, and the risk multiplies.

Dr Jain explains that biology also plays a significant role. “Women, particularly Asian women, are more likely to develop adenocarcinoma, a subtype of lung cancer that often occurs in non-smokers. These cancers frequently carry genetic mutations that drive cancer growth even without heavy tobacco exposure. Hormonal factors and differences in how women metabolise toxins may further increase susceptibility. The result is a younger, non-smoking woman walking into an oncology clinic with advanced lung cancer, a scenario that is no longer rare.”

Warning signs women must not ignore

“One of the biggest dangers is delay,” Dr Jain warns. “Symptoms are often dismissed as pollution-related cough, asthma, allergy, or recurrent infection. Many women are diagnosed at an advanced stage because neither patients nor doctors suspect lung cancer early.”

  

This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for medicines, exercises and so on.   

 

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home