Monday, October 22, 2012
smokers lungs after 10 years
we calculate that the risk for lung
cancer probably returns to that of a nonsmoker somewhere between 10 and 15
years after smoking cessation. (We have less data on the [other
smoking-related cancers].) But the risk that people have for
smoking-related diseases is directly related to the total number of
cigarettes they've smoked in their life. We measure that with something we
call "pack-years": that's the average number of packs per day multiplied by
the number of years they've smoked. The greater the pack-years, the greater
the risk. When you're getting up around 50 pack-years and beyond, that's a
lot. If people have a lot of pack-years, the risk of, say, lung cancer never
goes back down to [the risk of a non-smoker].
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