4.0 Article Proceedings Paper

Ten years of experience in lung cancer screening in Gdansk, Poland: a comparative study of the evaluation and surgical treatment of 14200 participants of 2 lung cancer screening programmes

Journal

INTERACTIVE CARDIOVASCULAR AND THORACIC SURGERY
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 266-273

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icvts/ivz079

Keywords

Lung cancer; Screening; Low-dose computed tomography

Funding

  1. European Economic Area Financial Mechanism
  2. Marshall of the Pomeranian Voivodeship
  3. National Centre for Research and Development (Narodowe Centrum Badan i Rozwoju)

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OBJECTIVES: The European Society of Thoracic Surgeons' recommendations confirm the implementation of lung cancer screening in Europe. We compared 2 screening programmes, the Pilot Pomeranian Lung Cancer Screening Programme (pilot study) and the Moltest Bis programme, completed in a single centre. METHODS: A total of 8649 healthy volunteers (aged 50-75 years, smoking history >= 20 pack-years) were enrolled in a pilot study between 2009 and 2011, and a total of 5534 healthy volunteers (aged 50-79, smoking history >= 30 pack-years) were enrolled in the Moltest Bis programme between 2016 and 2017. Each participant had a low-dose computed tomography scan of the chest. Participants with a nodule diameter of >10 mm or with suspected tumour morphology underwent a diagnostic work-up in the pilot study. In the Moltest Bis programme, the criteria were based on the volume of the detected nodule on the baseline low-dose computed tomography scan and the volume doubling time in the subsequent rounds. RESULTS: Lung cancer was diagnosed in 107 (1.24%) and 105 (1.90%) participants of the pilot study and of the Moltest Bis programme, respectively (P = 0.002). A total of 300 (3.5%) and 199 (3.6%) patients, respectively, were referred for further invasive diagnostic work-ups (P= 0.69). A total of 125 (1.5%) and 80 (1.5%) patients, respectively, underwent surgical resection (P= 0.74). The number of resected benign lesions was similar: 44 (35.0%) and 20 (25.0%), respectively (P = 0.13), but with a downwards trend. Lobectomies and/or segmentectomies were performed in 84.0% and 90.0% of patients with lung cancer, respectively (P= 0.22). Notably, patients in the Moltest Bis programme underwent video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery more often than did those in the pilot study (72.5% vs 24.0%, P < 0.001). Surgical patients with stages I and II non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) accounted for 83.4% of the Moltest patients and 86.4% of the pilot study patients (P = 0.44). CONCLUSIONS: Modified inclusion criteria in the screening programme lead to a higher detection rate of NSCLC. Growing expertise in lung cancer screening leads to increased indications for minimally invasive surgery and an increased proportion of lung-sparing resections. A single-team experience in lung cancer screening does not lead to a major reduction in the rate of diagnostic procedures and operations for non-malignant lesions.

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