The death rate from cancer has fallen over the past 25 years, but lung cancer will overtake breast cancer as the biggest killer among women within the next few years, said leading experts.
Across Europe mortality rates rise only for lung cancer in women and pancreatic cancer in men and women.
The mortality rate for lung cancer among women will rise by 8 per cent this year, while the number of breast-cancer deaths falls by 9 per cent, according to a new international study.
Researchers at the University of Milan and Lausanne Hospital in Switzerland project that the trends will continue, with lung cancer likely to become the biggest cause of cancer death among women by the end of the decade as more women who began smoking in the 1960s and 1970s succumb to the disease in old age.
Overall, cancer deaths have fallen by 26 per cent among men and by 20 per cent in women over the past 25 years, thanks to improved treatments and quicker diagnosis through screening programmes and imaging technology.