Lung cancer rates are increasing substantially in women, particularly in non-smoking women, with no known reason for the increase. Now researchers at Fox Chase Cancer Center may have uncovered a critical piece in the puzzle. Working in a mouse model of smoking-induced lung cancer, Margie Clapper, Ph.D., Co-leader of the Cancer Prevention and Control Program at Fox Chase Cancer Center, and colleagues found that smoke triggers rapid changes in gene expression in the lungs of female mice, including increasing expression of a network of genes involved in estrogen metabolism... 

More...
More...