Overall, the number of women diagnosed with lung cancer has risen from around 7,800 cases in 1975 to more than 17,500 in 2008. Figures for men went from 23,400 over-60s diagnosed in 1975, falling to 19,400 in 2008, with rates showing a similar large drop.
The charity said 5,700 women over 60 were diagnosed with lung cancer in 1975, compared with 15,100 in 2008.
In the late 1980s, lung cancers in women in their 60s plateaued, and even started to fall. But they began to rise again in 2002. However cancer rates among women in their 40s did fall between 1975 and 2008.
Smoking causes around 90% of lung cancers, and CRUK wants more efforts to be put into anti-smoking measures.
Jean King, Cancer Research UK's director of tobacco control, said: "Around nine in 10 cases of lung cancer are caused by smoking and one in five people still smoke, so it's vital that work continues to support smokers to quit and protect young people from being recruited into an addiction that kills half of all long term smokers. "In particular we want displays in shops covered up so that young people are no longer being exposed to this form of tobacco marketing."
CRUK - Lung cancer - survival statistics.
Related.. Lung cancer patients who quit smoking double their survival chances..
Reference: Lung cancer rates have more than doubled for women over 60 since the mid-1970s, figures show BBC News Health, 3/6/2011. .
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