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UK Lung Cancer RCT Pilot Screening Trial: baseline findings from the screening arm provide evidence for the potential implementation of lung cancer screening.

Authors :
Field, J. K.
Duffy, S. W.
Baldwin, D. R.
Whynes, D. K.
Devaraj, A.
Brain, K. E.
Eisen, T.
Gosney, J.
Green, B. A.
Holemans, J. A.
Kavanagh, T.
Kerr, K. M.
Ledson, M.
Lifford, K. J.
McRonald, F. E.
Nair, A.
Page, R. D.
Parmar, M. K. B.
Rassl, D. M.
Rintoul, R. C.
Source :
Thorax; Feb2016, Vol. 71 Issue 2, p161-170, 10p, 1 Black and White Photograph, 2 Diagrams, 4 Charts, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>Lung cancer screening using low-dose CT (LDCT) was shown to reduce lung cancer mortality by 20% in the National Lung Screening Trial.<bold>Methods: </bold>The pilot UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS) is a randomised controlled trial of LDCT screening for lung cancer versus usual care. A population-based questionnaire was used to identify high-risk individuals. CT screen-detected nodules were managed by a pre-specified protocol. Cost effectiveness was modelled with reference to the National Lung Cancer Screening Trial mortality reduction.<bold>Results: </bold>247 354 individuals aged 50-75 years were approached; 30.7% expressed an interest, 8729 (11.5%) were eligible and 4055 were randomised, 2028 into the CT arm (1994 underwent a CT). Forty-two participants (2.1%) had confirmed lung cancer, 34 (1.7%) at baseline and 8 (0.4%) at the 12-month scan. 28/42 (66.7%) had stage I disease, 36/42 (85.7%) had stage I or II disease. 35/42 (83.3%) had surgical resection. 536 subjects had nodules greater than 50 mm(3) or 5 mm diameter and 41/536 were found to have lung cancer. One further cancer was detected by follow-up of nodules between 15 and 50 mm(3) at 12 months. The baseline estimate for the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of once-only CT screening, under the UKLS protocol, was £8466 per quality adjusted life year gained (CI £5542 to £12 569).<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The UKLS pilot trial demonstrated that it is possible to detect lung cancer at an early stage and deliver potentially curative treatment in over 80% of cases. Health economic analysis suggests that the intervention would be cost effective-this needs to be confirmed using data on observed lung cancer mortality reduction.<bold>Trial Registration: </bold>ISRCTN 78513845. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00406376
Volume :
71
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Thorax
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
112763928
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2015-207140