4.7 Article

Screening for lung cancer - ACCP evidence-based clinical practice guidelines (2nd edition)

Journal

CHEST
Volume 132, Issue 3, Pages 69S-77S

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1378/chest.07-1349

Keywords

biomolecular markers; chest radiograph; low-dose CT; lung cancer screening; sputum cytology

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Background: Lung cancer typically exhibits symptoms only after the disease has spread, making cure unlikely. Because early-stage disease can be successfully treated, a screening technique that can detect lung cancer before it has spread might be useful in decreasing lung cancer mortality. Objectives: In this article, we review the evidence for and against screening for lung cancer with low-dose CT and offer recommendations regarding its usefulness for asymptomatic patients with no history of cancer. 9 v have failed to Results: Studies of lung cancer screening with chest radiograph and sputum cytology demonstrate that screening lowers lung cancer mortality rates. Published studies of newer screening technologies such as low-dose CT and biomarker screening report primarily on lung cancer detection rates and do not present sufficient data to determine whether the newer technologies win benefit or harm. Although researchers are conducting randomized trials of low-dose CT, results win not be available for several years. In the meantime, cost-effectiveness analyses and studies of nodule growth are considering practical questions but producing inconsistent findings. Conclusions: For high-risk populations, no screening modality has been shown to alter mortality outcomes. We recommend that individuals undergo screening only when it is administered as a component of a well-designed clinical trial with appropriate human subjects' protections.

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