Severe COVID or flu may quietly raise lung cancer risk—but vaccines appear to stop the damage before it starts.
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease's development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research from UVA Health's Beirne ...
Patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19 have an increased risk of developing lung cancer months or years later, according to new research from the University of Virginia.
A recent study has found that severe cases COVID-19 or influenza can leave lasting changes in the lungs that increase the ...
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease's development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research from UVA Health's Beirne ...
Moderna’s Omicron-adapted COVID-19 vaccines appear to reduce the risk of hospitalization and death in adults who are not ...
Falling ill with covid, an extreme case of the flu or pneumonia makes you more vulnerable to developing lung cancer, according to researchers. The new findings, published in medical journal Cell, ...
Digital access and care continuity correlated strongly with telemedicine uptake, including patient portal use (OR 1.44) and returning-visit status, while new-patient encounters were markedly less ...
Derived from early pandemic waves and needing recalibration for new variants, these renal markers and IL 10 could act as ...
A severe case of COVID-19 or influenza could increase the risk of lung cancer later on, according to new research. Scientists ...