Dr. Chandra Belani, Professor of Medicine and Oncology at the University of Pittsburg Cancer Institute, is a leader in the study of lung cancer. During a podcast interview, Belani shares some thoughts on the state of lung cancer -- currently the most common cause of cancer death in the United States.Belani reveals that progress in the areas of lung cancer prevention, screening, diagnosis, and treatment can best be described as modest. There has been some progress -- and there are many on-going studies in these areas -- but there are no major breakthrough stories. Belani says there has been modest progress in diagnosis with the use of CT scans and PET scans -- and a combination of the two. There has been modest progress in chemotherapy treatment options. There has been no significant advance in detection -- and prevention is mostly in the hands of each individual since 90 percent of lung cancer cases are related to smoking.
Belani shares that true achievement would come with the discovery of a biomarker to detect lung cancer early and to lower overall mortality rates. He would also like to determine why he is seeing an increase in lung cancer cases among non-smokers.
The bar is being raised, says Belani. But it's slow going.











1. Lung cancer is not my area, but I have noticed a number of studies indicating that three nutrients that affect prostate cancer also seem to affect lung cancer, though the data are not conclusive.
The three nutrients are: lycopene, selenium (for those who are deficient) and vitamin E.
You can find abstracts of relevant studies by going to www.pubmed.gov and searching for "lung cancer AND lycopene", etc.
While the data are not conclusive, if I were a smoker, I would be making sure I was getting enough of these nutrients and watching for news about them and lung cancer. (I'm a survivor, not a medical professional, so check these out for yourself.)
Jim Waldenfels
Posted at 7:01PM on Oct 13th 2006 by Jim Waldenfels