• Rich Barlow

    Senior Writer

    Photo: Headshot of Rich Barlow, an older white man with dark grey hair and wearing a grey shirt and grey-blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey backdrop.

    Rich Barlow is a senior writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. Perhaps the only native of Trenton, N.J., who will volunteer his birthplace without police interrogation, he graduated from Dartmouth College, spent 20 years as a small-town newspaper reporter, and is a former Boston Globe religion columnist, book reviewer, and occasional op-ed contributor. Profile

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There are 16 comments on Never Smoked. Lived Right. Died of Lung Cancer.

  1. Is it not also possible that had a smoker never smoked, they still could have gotten lung cancer? In other words, doesn’t it sound reasonable that someone genetically predisposed to lung cancer, got said cancer due to genetics and not due to the fact that they smoked?

    1. You have got to be a smoker. You people build an entire belief system based on a habit. You want to smoke; you don’t care if it will eventually kill you and you sure as hell don’t care who you kill along the way.You don’t base your belief on facts. 90% of the people who die from lung cancer are active smokers (American Lung Association). Just because some people die who are non-smokers doesn’t mean that cigarette smoking does not cause cancer.

      You will be on your deathbed dying of lung cancer still swearing that it wasn’t because you smoked, and begging for cigarettes.

      1. Kathy wrote “You don’t base your belief on facts. 90% of the people who die from lung cancer are active smokers (American Lung Association).”

        WRONG.

        Mary is correct: it IS possible for someone genetically predisposed to lung cancer who *also* happens to smoke, to get lung cancer from that predisposition rather than from their smoking. Many people smoke for decades without ever developing lung cancer, whereas about 30,000 Americans who have never smoked will die this year from lung cancer that has likely formed, metastasized and killed them, all in less than a year. It is absolutely possible to have both the predisposition AND to be a smoker, and to get the cancer from the former rather than the latter.

        And the actual percentage of those in 2015 who die from lung cancer who are active smokers is closer to 80%, with 20% who have never smoked being afflicted with it and dying.

        Full disclosure: Neither my wife nor I have ever smoked, nor do we excuse people for smoking. Nevertheless, she was just diagnosed with stage-IV lung cancer.

      2. Kathy, you are wrong. The most deadly of lung cancers, small cell, IS typically diagnosed in current or former smokers. 99.5% of males with small cell have a history. Non-small cell has a significantly higher percentage of non-somokers, and though not quite as lethal (percentage wise) it’s still kills most of it’s victims.

        Here’s the kicker. I HAVE NEVER SMOKED and I was dx’d with small cell a couple of months ago. I am going to die and see it coming. With treatment 20% can acheive a remission. Remissions last anywhere from 2-24 months. Maybe 2% are still alive at five years…..but constantly looking over their shoulders…. It sucks!!!!

  2. my mother in law just passed the other day with stage 4 lung cancer quit smoking several yrs ago she had copd,does any one with copd need to be screened for lung cancer?

  3. My 28 year old daughter died 7 years ago from Stage IV lung cancer. She was a nonsmoker. She was also pregnant at the time of her diagnosis. Thankfully she delivered her son at almost 28 weeks. My daughter lost her battle against lung cancer just 6 months after his birth. No one else in our family has had lung cancer. What are the chances her son might also be diagnosed with lung cancer?

    1. Sorry to hear about your loss. YOu can test the child companies like 23 and me offer DNA testing. It doesn’t have to be lung cancer runing in your family it could be other types of cancer. She was to young almost sure it was due to a genetic mutation. About 50% of smokers never get cancer some people are extremelly resistant to it and their cells repais most of the damage. That why you hear stories about 96 year old guy who smoked all his life and he is just fine. But the other side of the coin some people cells fail to repair even minor damage.

  4. I’m a seven-plus year lung cancer survivor, an active advocate for research, and a very active member of the patient and family centered care movement. It is with that as a brief introduction that I write the following.

    I think it’s unfortunate that we still pit lung cancer victims against one another by perpetuating the conversation of lung cancer and smoking. Yes, we all know that smoking is a major contributor in the incidence of lung cancer. But there are also significant environmental and, as raised by the article, potentially genetic causes for the disease. If we are to address the causes of this disease I believe we must look at the cocktail of exposures that may be more significant than any one cause.

    If asbestos exposure increases a smoker’s likelihood of developing lung cancer by fifty times that of smoking alone, shouldn’t that be considered? If a genetic predisposition to lung cancer might increase the odds of developing the disease, how are those odds enhanced by regular exposure to urban smog, radon, or second-hand smoke? And how much more if you worked in an older government building that might have used asbestos tiles or insulation?

    I’m not trying to minimize the dangers of tobacco. If anything I believe there should be a prohibition on the products. But to act surprised when a non-smoker succumbs to lung cancer is also a way of indicting smokers and former smokers as complicit in their illness. It’s a stigma that haunts lung cancer victims and denies the research funding needed to aggressively address the disease.

    We don’t ask breast cancer patients why they didn’t have children, and we don’t ask colon cancer patients if they participated in anal sex – and yes, it is my intent to be absurd here! We got over the stigma’s attached to AIDS because we learned that it was infecting everyone. We need to do the same with the stigma of lung cancer.

    So fight against tobacco by fighting against tobacco – not its victims. Tobacco use contributes to over six million deaths a year. It’s not just lung cancer, it’s heart disease, esophageal cancer, emphysema, and COPD to name just a few. And it’s becoming more dangerous because our environment has become all the more dangerous.

    The reality is that lung cancer is curable if caught early. The need for more effective and affordable screening tools is obvious. But that requires research and research requires funding, and few are willing to fund research for a disease that is perceived – even by its victims – to be self inflicted.

    I would beg you to be cautious of blaming lung cancer on its easiest victims. It works against all of us and does nothing for our cause.

    1. Great post. It will probably take a full ban on all tobacco products and everyone smokefree to get decent research funding. Only then will they see that people STILL die from lung cancer – thus separating lung-cancer from smoking (finally).

  5. my daughter also m died of lung cancer and never smoked although she had she had being exposed to a chemical from a cement company where she lived a few miles away also did some digging around the cement company for a project for ucr she was an was exposed to the chemical was found in her blood also she had developed other cancers because on this chemicail she survivied ll years lung cancer 8 months mo. sbe just passed 2 weeks ago too much sufferring endourded so much pain and harsh med. testing her arms full of brusis because the needs. but yet never complainded just want to live to finish raissing her l3 yr. old and 22 yr. old great single mother . the husbant left her because he could handle her cancer. a finncial strugglling mother yet she made sure her 22 stay in a city college which she could barely afford. she was known to all as a trooper. now she is in heaven with her maker the lord. loved her so much . thank you

  6. really sad to hear about your daughter, and heartly appreciate for her struggle to raise her children, just wish her soul REST IN PEACE!

  7. These testimonials are so sad due to the fact they lost their loved one. I am a former “closet smoker”, nevertheless a smoker. I own that and I was so ignorant to the fact of I could die from this. I was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and I am fighting like hell and will continue to fight. It bothers me deeply that the funding for research and new meds is not there because of ME! I have the cancer that kills the nonsmokers, ironic as that is. I want to spread the word that cancer can kill anyone with lungs. The stigma of people killing themselves by smoking is not the only people in the arena of lung cancer. How can we change this and get more funding? I want to help make this happen for all people with lung cancer. I am on round 34 of my chemo and I am so blessed after 3 years with this terrible disease. The cards are stacked against me but I have HOPE that one day we will cure lung cancer.

  8. Sure, never-smokers contract diseases usually associated with tobacco use. I don’t personally find this surprising. We are biological beings – stuff goes wrong. I think of us a 1000-sided Rubik’s Cubes; very complicated with billions of combos involving genetics, environment, & lifestyle choices. To think that any one component can be pinpointed as THE cause of an individual’s cancer(s)/COPD seems simplististic at best & flat-out misleading at worst.

    Now, having said that – I come from a family where smoking kills. My grandfather of small-cell lung cancer at 60, grandmother of emphysema at 77, eldest sister at 47 of small-cell lung cancer. My mother died a suicide at 37, but I still remember her classic pre-emphysemic cough in her EARLY 30s! Had she not killed herself, I imagine smoking would have gotten her, too, sooner or later. My two remaining sisters are occasional smokers, a couple of nephews, a niece. You’d think our family history would have deterred them, right? Nope! I am 53 and one of a handful who have never even tried smoking, not even once. Additionally, I’m actually allergic to tobacco (or perhaps some additive in cigarettes.) Took weekly shots for 7 years in my youth for that allergy. Again, you’d think my relatives would have refrained from smoking around me – and again, that would be a big NOPE. I now have “emphysemic changes” in the upper part of my right lung. That was shocking to hear, since I have no symptoms. (Those chest x-rays were for something else altogether.)

    The Surgeon General’s report in 1964 officially stigmatized smoking, and rates have declined steadily since then. Still, there will always be smokers. I’m sorry if non-smokers with classic smoking-associated diseases feel insulted by the assumption that they smoked – but that is a momentary aggravation easily corrected. Much as cirrhosis of the liver is overwhelmingly linked to alcohol abuse, thus certain cancers/COPD are also behaviorally-driven maladies.

    If I ever end up with full-blown emphysema, surely most people will assume I am/was a smoker. I’ll tell them that no – I NEVER smoked. If they don’t believe me? C’est la vie, that’s no skin off my nose!

  9. My sister died from Lung cancer, she hadn’t smoked for 30 years! Not one question from a doctor about anything in her back ground.Doctors seem not to be interested in anything that doesn’t go with smoking.It didn’t matter that as a child her home was heated with coal or her food was cooked on a wood stove, or that her water came from a well etc. or that her illness was treated by our parents with such things as Qunine, trupintine,etc. My brother has COPD and he is been treated by doctors the same way, it doesn’t matter that he worked as a auto repair man all his life breathing in fumes from exhaust,brake dust etc. I myself with my heart problems tried to tell my Dr. about some of these and asked him about it, his reply. Oh no it’s the smoking, no matter what kind of a Doctor I go to the first thing I am asked is do I smoke and yes I do and that is the problem from there on in. On the other hand I have a sister in her middle 80’s and has smoked since a young age ,not a thing but a little high blood pressure etc.and recently when told to quit smoking or it was going to kill her, she said at my age I would just as soon die from smoking as I would from not smoking.
    Couldn’t part of the problem be that Dr’s the none smokers, the Gov. everyone didn’t yell everything is smoking. Wouldn’t they be more likely to be believed? I swear I went to the Dr. for a kidney infection his answer was it was smoking. My died sister was promised that if only she’d quit smoking she would not get cancer of the Lung’s wrong.My 84 yr., sister swear’s our dead sister’s quitting brought her cancer out,that smoking didn’t cause the cancer, she would have had it even if she never smoked. My friend died from Lung cancer, she was having some pain and went to her Dr. he examined her toke some test and told her not come back until she quit smoking a month later she was dead never did go back to him. No 1 is treated as badly as smokers,Not Druggies, Not drunk’s etc., no one like smoker’s why, they to kill, they die,they to make that choice every day.

  10. I really enjoyed this article and the comments. I am a current smoker with a <10 cigarette a day habit. Little backstory to add to that is that I ran a drycleaners for years and breathed everything from tripercoethelene, acetone, acetate, and many other chemicals. So at this stage (which they have at 3)it could be from either actually. I noticed nobody mentioned Anti-trypisin in their comments or acrticles so thought I'd throw it out there. They are saying that people who are anti-trypisin deficient are more likely to have COPD. I am sorry for those who have lost loved ones. There can be many reasons a person ges cancer, but I will tell you what I've heard, and see if that helps think differently for those who are so dead set against smokers. Everyone has the cancer gene in their body. If that gene activates you get cancer, doesn't matter what kind, you get some form of it. My Mother died at 56 from Leukemia. After chemotherapy 3 times and a bone marrow transplant, she still died. She was mostly a healthy person, lived her life right. People can say it's genetics or just their time, but we don't really know, do we? I feel like that as long as I'm not hurting others with my habit (don't smoke in my house or car or around others) then people should let people be. JMO

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