Types of Lung Cancer
There are two major types of lung cancers, non-small cell lung cancer and small
cell lung cancer, depending on how the cells look under a
microscope. Each type of lung cancer grows and spreads in
different ways and is treated differently.
Lung cancer refers to malignant tumors that originate in the lung itself. A cancer
of lung lining or pleura is called mesothelioma and is a
different type of cancer.
Small cell lung cancer
About 20 out of every 100 lung cancers diagnosed are small
cell lung cancer Which is so called because the cancer
cells are small cells that are mostly filled with the nucleus
(the control centre of cells). Small cell cancer can also
be called 'oat cell' cancer. This type of cancer is usually
always caused by smoking. It is not common for someone
who has never smoked to develop it. Small cell lung cancer
often spreads quite early so doctors often suggest treatment
with chemotherapy rather than surgery.
Non-small cell lung cancer
There are three types of non-small cell lung cancer. These
are grouped together because they behave in a similar way
and respond to treatment differently to small cell lung
cancer. The three types are:
• Squamous cell carcinoma
• Adenocarcinoma
• Large cell carcinoma
Secondary
cancer is cancer that has spread from somewhere
else in the body. There are quite a few different cancers
that can spread to the lungs, including breast cancer and
bowel cancer.
It is important to know what you are
dealing with so that you can find the right information.
The choice of cancer treatment depends on where the cancer
started. When cancer spreads to the lung from the breast,
the cells are breast cancer cells, not lung cancer cells.
So they respond to breast cancer treatments. And cancer that
has spread from the bowel should respond to bowel cancer
treatments.
Find out more about:
Small Cell Lung Cancer
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
Mesothelioma
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