4.5 Review

Lung cancer screening and smoking cessation efforts

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL LUNG CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 1099-1109

Publisher

AME PUBLISHING COMPANY
DOI: 10.21037/tlcr-20-899

Keywords

Smoking cessation; lung cancer screening; literature review

Funding

  1. EU-Horizon 2020 - grant (4-IN-THE-LUNG-RUN
  2. lung cancer screening implementation trial) [848294]

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Randomized-controlled trials have shown that low-dose computed tomography screening can reduce lung cancer mortality, but evidence on integrating smoking cessation support is lacking. Combining lung cancer screening with smoking cessation can significantly reduce mortality risk. Multi-modality interventions delivered by clinicians may be the most successful in influencing smoking behavior.
Randomized-controlled trials have confirmed substantial reductions in lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening. Evidence on how to integrate smoking cessation support in lung cancer screening is however scarce. This represents a significant gap in the literature, as a combined strategy of lung cancer screening and smoking cessation greatly reduces the mortality risk due to lung cancer and other related comorbidities. In this review, a literature search in MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Google Scholar was performed to identify randomized-controlled and observational studies investigating the effect of lung cancer screening trials and integrated cessation interventions on smoking cessation. Of the 236 identified records, we included 32 original publications. Smoking cessation rates in lung cancer screening trials are promising. Especially findings suspicious for lung cancer and referral to a physician might function as a teachable moment to motivate smoking abstinence in current smokers or recent quitters. More intensive, personalized and multi-modality smoking cessation interventions delivered by a clinician appear to be the most successful in influencing smoking behavior. While it is evident that smoking cessation should be incorporated in lung cancer screening, further research is required to ascertain the optimal treatment type, modality, timing, and content of communication including the incorporation of CT results to motivate health behavior change.

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