
Family history of cancer is a risk factor and predictor of who may develop lung cancer, and when, according to recent study findings.
The study, which was published in Lung Cancer, used data from the Thoracic Tumors Registry, a nationwide database sponsored by the Spanish Lung Cancer Group, to perform 2 analyses using artificial intelligence (AI).
From August 2016 to June 2020, the researchers reviewed differences between patients with lung cancer based on family history of cancer. The median age at diagnosis in patients who had family history of cancer was 63.7 years, while those with no family history of cancer had a median age of 64.8 years. Most patients in the study were White women and formerly smoked, with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0 to 1. Stage IV lung cancer was most common (46.6% with family history of cancer vs 48.95% with no family history of cancer). Moreover, EGFR-mutated disease was more prevalent than ALK, ROS1, KRAS, and BRAF.