Radiation-induced lung cancer

Last revised by Andrew Murphy on 23 Mar 2023

Radiation-induced lung cancers are a potential long-term complication of radiotherapy to the chest. 

Besides lung cancersarcomas (osteosarcomas are the most common arising from the irradiated bones, and malignant fibrous histiocytomas the most frequently arising from the soft tissues), breast cancersmalignant pleural mesothelioma, and esophageal cancers are also potential induced malignancies in those patients receiving radiotherapy to the chest 1

Epidemiology

They have been reported as a rare late complication of radiation therapy in both post-operative breast cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma patients. These occur 5-10 years (or later) after treatment 2-5.

There appears to be increased risk of lung cancer in these patients if they also smoke tobacco 2.​

As technology has made radiotherapy more precise with the highly conformal therapies, treatments in the last decades have minimized the incidental delivery of radiation to normal tissues. Since long-term survival for oncology patients has improved, the impact of these changes over the incidence of radiation-induced cancers is still to be seen 1

Radiographic features

Besides location within the irradiated field 1, there are no other specific imaging features of the tumors themselves that differ radiation-induced from the sporadic lung cancers. Please refer to the parental article on lung cancer for further details. 

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