The two main types of lung cancer are small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Most are related to tobacco use, making quitting critical for any patient being treated for lung cancer.
Smokers can get two different types of NSCLC called adenocarcinoma and squamous cell. Nonsmokers are more likely to get adenocarcinoma.
At the Cancer Institute, we use new low-dose CT scan screening to diagnose lung cancer earlier. We help providers qualify patients for screenings: Eligible patients must have a one-pack-a-day or more smoking history for 20 years, be between 50 and 80, generally healthy and have no lung-cancer symptoms.
Through our MSK affiliation, we also offer some lung cancer patients immunotherapy, which uses medication to stimulate the immune system to target and destroy cancer cells more effectively.
Smoking is also a leading cause of esophageal cancer. Smokers have a 500 percent greater chance of developing cancer in the esophagus, a muscular tube in the digestive tract that transports food from the mouth to the stomach.
Combining tobacco and alcohol makes the risk even greater. The Cancer Institute offers many resources to help with smoking cessation.
The Cancer Institute team, focused on early detection and prompt treatment of esophageal cancer, also champions use of the best available technology. In 2018, for example, the team became the first in Connecticut to perform a robotic esophagectomy for esophageal cancer. The robotic approach allows the surgeon to operate through small incisions instead of large abdominal and chest incisions. The result is less pain, less blood loss and a faster recovery.
Thymus Cancer
Tumors on the thymus, a butterfly-shaped gland at the base of the neck, are extremely rare, with only about 400 cases a year in the United States.
The thymus, made predominantly of lymphatic tissue, helps produce the immune system’s T cells that attack specific foreign particles. The gland’s tissue slowly degenerates in puberty.
People with thymus cancer generally have the gland removed, or undergo radiation and chemotherapy.