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I have never smoked, but, have developed a lung nodule. The doctor will have it xrayed every 6 mos. A PET SCAN indicated it was not cancerous. Why do lung nodules form and what percentage probability can one become cancerous?

2006-07-13 19:22:35 · 3 answers · asked by jom 4 in Health Diseases & Conditions Respiratory Diseases

3 answers

Background: Patients with solitary pulmonary nodules (SPNs) are usually asymptomatic; however, SPNs pose a challenge to both physicians and patients. Whether detected serendipitously or during a routine investigation, a nodule on a chest radiograph raises several questions: Is the nodule benign or malignant? Should it be investigated or observed? Should it be surgically resected?
Most SPNs are benign, but they may represent an early stage of lung cancer. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, accounting for more deaths annually than breast, colon, and prostate cancers combined. Lung cancer survival rates remain dismally low at 14% at 5 years. Early lung cancer, when the primary tumor is less than 3 cm in diameter (stage 1A), may lead to 5-year survival rates of 70-80%. Therefore, prompt diagnosis and management of early lung cancer manifesting as SPN may be the only chance for cure.


Pathophysiology: An SPN is defined as a single, discrete pulmonary opacity that is less than 3 cm in diameter, surrounded by normal lung tissue, and not associated with adenopathy or atelectasis.

Generally, a pulmonary nodule must reach 1 cm in diameter before it can be identified on a chest radiograph. For a malignant nodule to reach this size, approximately 30 doublings would have occurred. The average doubling time for a tumor is 120 days (range, 7-590 d). A lesion at this growth rate may be present for 10 years before discovery.

An SPN may be secondary to one of the numerous differential diagnoses listed in Causes. However, more than 95% are neoplasms (most likely primary), granulomas (most likely infectious), or benign lesions (most likely hamartoma).


Frequency:


In the US: SPNs are one of the most common thoracic radiographic abnormalities. Approximately 150,000 cases are detected each year as an incidental finding, either on images from chest radiographs or images from thoracic CT scans (Lillington, 1991). Approximately 40-50% of these nodules are malignant. Most are bronchogenic carcinoma, but 10-30% may be solitary metastases.
Mortality/Morbidity: Most SPNs are benign, but they may represent an early stage of lung cancer.

While lung cancer survival rates remain dismally low at 14% at 5 years, early lung cancer, ie, diagnosed when the primary tumor has a diameter smaller than 3 cm (stage 1A), can be associated with a 5-year survival rate of 70-80%.
Accordingly, the only chance for cure of early lung cancer manifesting as SPN is prompt diagnosis and management.
Age: Risk of malignancy increases with age.

For individuals younger than 39 years, the risk is 3%.
The risk increases to 15% for individuals aged 40-49 years, to 43% for persons aged 50-59 years, and to more than 50% for persons older than 60 years.

2006-07-14 14:06:35 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

please...help. Am intelligent,but scared. CTwithdyecontrast showed: indeterminate (not sure) 10x4 mm spiculated nodule upper right lobe. .worrisome for lung neoplasm. no thoracic adenopathy. saw thorasic surgeon yesterday, set up surgery for mar.12. Not feeling comfortable with it. he is general lung surgeon. I quit smoking 2 yrs. ago. in 2008 there was a (small) 4mm nodule same area, although they didn't tell me or I would've gotten ct at about 1-2 year intervals. He says he suspects 80% chance malignant. I want to know how to proceed...(fast) it may not be cancer,(I read my risk (age 54) would be more like 50%. any solid advice would be appreciated.

2015-02-28 04:08:42 · answer #2 · answered by Diane 1 · 0 0

Since nodules can form for a number of reasons, it's not possible to give any kind of prognosis. Depending on where you've been and what other symptoms you have, it might be wise to check for tuberculosis; the sooner it's treated, the better. Other sources of inflammation (such as soot or industrial fumes) can cause nodules, as can lungworm (though it's pretty rare in humans).

2006-07-13 19:39:57 · answer #3 · answered by dukefenton 7 · 0 0

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