Early Diagnosis of Lung Cancer
A special issue of Diagnostics (ISSN 2075-4418). This special issue belongs to the section "Pathology and Molecular Diagnostics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2020) | Viewed by 400
Special Issue Editor
Interests: lung cancer; thoracic surgery; thoracic diseases; early diagnosis
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
The incidence of lung cancer remains high, and smoking among women and young people is still on the increase; lung cancer prognosis is still poor, and it remains the number one cause of all cancer deaths. Moreover, this bleak prognosis is intimately linked to diagnosis all too often being made at an advanced incurable stage, with early diagnosis being so infrequent. However, lung cancer stage I survival at five years may reach more than 90%. Given this, we have two primary weapons to fight this unfavorable prognosis: prevention and early diagnosis. Governments worldwide have passed stringent smoking laws to prevent the incidence of lung cancer, involving outright bans and restricting smoke exposure in closed environments. Although this policy is universally supported, the increased proportion of teenage smokers, plus alternatives such as e-cigarettes, is likely to frustrate all the efforts implemented so far. The scientific community has a compelling impetus to strive towards a single test or a multipanel diagnostic algorithm for screening and detection of lung cancers at an early stage. Finally, industrialized countries are called upon to finance measures to improve precision medicine ranging from morphological imaging/CT/RMN to onco-multi-omics approaches, bearing in mind their lower invasiveness and greater portability.
Dr. Gasparri Roberto
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Early diagnosis of lung cancer
- Big data
- OMICS
- Chest CT scan and RMN whole-body
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