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Symptoms Often Felt Long
Before Lung Cancer Found
The belief that lung cancer develops
stealthily until it's too late for treatment may be inaccurate.
Many patients recall having symptoms several months before their
diagnosis, recent study findings suggest.
"It is generally believed that lung cancer is silent, having
no signs or symptoms before it is far advanced," Dr. Jessica
L. Corner, of the University of Southampton, UK, said in an interview
with Reuters Health. Her group's findings, however, suggest that
this is not the case.
Corner and colleagues examined the path to diagnosis in 22 patients
with recently confirmed lung cancer. The researchers conducted
interviews with the patients and gathered data from their hospital
and doctor's records.
The subjects experienced a total of 30 different symptoms prior
to diagnosis, the investigators report in the medical journal
Thorax. The patients recalled having new symptoms for many months,
regardless of the disease stage at the time of diagnosis.
The most common were chest symptoms, including cough, breathing
changes, and chest or rib pain. More generalized symptoms, including
fatigue, lethargy and weight loss, were also common.
"The second and related finding was that patients had all delayed
visiting a doctor about their symptoms for many months, as they
did not interpret their symptoms as serious or as possible signs
of lung cancer," Corner said.
"If the public were made more aware of the possible symptoms
of lung cancer and believed that presenting early with them might
mean they would get more effective treatment, it might be possible
to diagnose some patients at an earlier stage," Corner concluded.
Corner's team hopes to confirm these findings in a larger study.
They also plan to compare the pre-diagnosis symptoms of lung
cancer patients with those of patients with other common conditions,
to see if there are any characteristics that may help physicians
identify patients at risk of lung cancer more easily.
SOURCE: Thorax, April 2005.
Reference
Source 89
April
6,
2005
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