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GO2 for Lung Cancer Applauds House Passage of Women and Lung Cancer Research and Preventive Services Act

April 21, 2026

GO2 for Lung Cancer today applauds House passage of H.R. 2319, the Women and Lung Cancer Research and Preventive Services Act, an important bipartisan step toward final enactment this Congress.

We commend the leadership of Representatives Brendan Boyle (D- 2- PA) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-1-PA). We also thank Speaker Mike Johnson (R-4-LA), Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-1-LA), and Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-8-NY) for advancing the bill under suspension and recognize the leadership of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, including Chairman Brett Guthrie (R-2-KY) and Ranking Member Frank Pallone (D-6-NJ).

This milestone builds on more than a decade of advocacy and research, including work with the Connors Center for Women’s Health and Gender Biology at Brigham and Women's Hospital, which first identified critical gaps in understanding lung cancer in women and called for a coordinated national response.

While smoking rates have declined, lung cancer diagnoses, particularly among women, have not kept pace. This underscores a critical truth that lung cancer can affect anyone, including people with no known risk factors. Yet this misconception continues to drive stigma and delay diagnosis. The key unanswered question is why younger, otherwise healthy women with no traditional risk factors are developing lung cancer.

“The placement of this bill on the House Suspension Calendar reflects strong bipartisan recognition that we must do more to address lung cancer in women,” said GO2 for Lung Cancer’s Interim Co-CEO Danielle Hicks. “Once implemented, this legislation will improve understanding of genetic, hormonal, environmental, and behavioral factors and strengthen prevention, screening, and treatment strategies for everyone impacted by lung cancer.”

“The advancement of this bill is about more than research funding, it is about correcting a dangerous and outdated narrative,” said GO2 for Lung Cancer’s Senior Director of Government Affairs, Elridge Proctor. “We are still seeing lung cancer in younger women with no known risk factors. That means critical scientific gaps remain, and patients are paying the price.”

By advancing a more complete understanding of disease risk beyond risk factors, the bill helps dismantle stigma at its root, replacing blame with evidence and ensuring that all patients are recognized, studied, and served.

GO2 for Lung Cancer urges the Senate to swiftly pass S. 1157 and conference with the House on the two versions to bring the bill to the President’s desk. We stand ready to work with federal agencies and leading patient advocacy organizations to ensure this legislation is implemented and delivers meaningful progress for everyone living with lung cancer.

Join us in taking action. Contact your Senator, every message counts!