The short answer
According to public reports, Patricia Neal died of lung cancer in 2010. Patricia Neal's experience is a reminder of why understanding lung cancer matters. This page pairs that publicly reported story with plain-language education on the disease, its warning signs, and how prevention and screening can help catch it early.
Patricia Neal died of lung cancer, according to public reports.
This story is paired with plain-language, medically grounded education about the cancer involved.
Early lung cancer often causes no symptoms.
The single biggest risk factor is tobacco smoke, and not smoking — or quitting — is the most powerful way to lower risk.
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The full explanation.
Who Patricia Neal was
Patricia Neal was best known as a public figure in film. Like many well-known people who have faced a cancer diagnosis, Patricia Neal's experience has helped raise public awareness of the disease.
What we know about Patricia Neal's cancer
According to public reports, Patricia Neal died of lung cancer in 2010. This article draws only on publicly reported information — noted in the source below — and focuses on what Patricia Neal's story can teach everyone about lung cancer.
Understanding lung cancer
Lung cancer begins in the cells of the lungs and is one of the leading causes of cancer death worldwide. The two main groups are non-small cell lung cancer (the most common) and small cell lung cancer. Its risk is discussed in our guide to radon.
Signs and symptoms
Early lung cancer often causes no symptoms. When they appear, warning signs can include a cough that does not go away or worsens, chest pain, shortness of breath, hoarseness, coughing up blood, and unexplained weight loss. Learn more about the signs of lung cancer.
Lowering the risk
The single biggest risk factor is tobacco smoke, and not smoking — or quitting — is the most powerful way to lower risk. Avoiding secondhand smoke, testing the home for radon, and limiting workplace exposures such as asbestos also help.
Finding it early
Lung cancer may be found on imaging such as a CT scan and confirmed with a biopsy. For people at high risk from smoking, low-dose CT screening can catch lung cancer earlier, when it is more treatable. See our guide to screening and early detection.
Why stories like this matter
When a public figure shares a cancer diagnosis, it can prompt others to learn the warning signs, talk with their doctor, and take screening seriously. That awareness saves lives — a cancer found early is very often far more treatable.
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The bottom line
According to public reports, Patricia Neal died of lung cancer in 2010. Behind every such headline is a real person — and a chance for the rest of us to understand lung cancer a little better, recognize its signs, and act on prevention and early detection.
This article summarizes publicly reported information together with general, medically grounded education; it is not a statement from Patricia Neal or Patricia Neal's family, and details may evolve. Spotted an error? Please email [email protected].
Words to know
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Common questions
▸What kind of cancer did Patricia Neal have?
Public reports indicate that Patricia Neal died of lung cancer in 2010. This page summarizes that publicly reported information and focuses on education about the disease.
▸What are the warning signs of lung cancer?
Early lung cancer often causes no symptoms. When they appear, warning signs can include a cough that does not go away or worsens, chest pain, shortness of breath, hoarseness, coughing up blood, and unexplained weight loss.
▸Can lung cancer be prevented or the risk lowered?
The single biggest risk factor is tobacco smoke, and not smoking — or quitting — is the most powerful way to lower risk. Avoiding secondhand smoke, testing the home for radon, and limiting workplace exposures such as asbestos also help.
▸How is lung cancer found or screened for?
Lung cancer may be found on imaging such as a CT scan and confirmed with a biopsy. For people at high risk from smoking, low-dose CT screening can catch lung cancer earlier, when it is more treatable.
Questions to ask your doctor
Being prepared helps you get the most out of your appointments. Save or print these questions.
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How this page was created
Cancer Explained uses AI to organize and translate information from the authoritative sources cited on each page. Automated checks review claims, citations, clarity, duplication, and potential safety concerns before publication. Our content is not currently reviewed by physicians unless a specific qualified reviewer is named on the page. Cancer Explained provides general education and should not replace advice from your healthcare team.
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