News

An international study found that air pollution leads to more cancer-related genetic changes than secondhand smoke.
Exposure to air pollution, other contaminants and traditional herbal medicines may be contributing to the development of lung ...
A new study reveals that air pollution, traditional herbal medicines and other environmental exposures are linked to genetic ...
Research from the NIH’s National Cancer Institute, an agency beleaguered by funding cuts and censorship, finds that ...
A new study has found strong genetic evidence that air pollution may contribute to the development of lung cancer in people who have never smoked or smoked only minimally. The research, undertaken by ...
Scientists at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and their colleagues at the University of California, San Diego, have found that ...
A recent study reveals a strong link between air pollution and lung cancer-driving DNA mutations, particularly in non-smokers.
Air pollution and some herbal remedies may raise lung cancer risk in non-smokers, a new study published in the peer-reviewed ...
When 20 year-old Chloe Fox moved to London to study tourism at the University of West London, exposure to the city’s air had ...
Air pollution and occupational exposure to asbestos, chromium, cadmium, arsenic, coal-based products, as well as genetic susceptibility and pre-existing lung disease, could all be contributing to ...