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Lung cancer diagnosed by an incidental lung nodule program or lung cancer screening

Authors :
Angela Fulford
Keith Tokin
Jennifer Kethireddy
Kim Adams
Amanda Epperson
Jeffrey Wright
Jim Machin
Meredith Ray
Edward T. Robbins
Nicholas Faris
Rob Optican
Raymond U. Osarogiagbon
Matthew P. Smeltzer
Meghan Meadows
Walter Stevens
Ajay Wagh
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 37:8546-8546
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2019.

Abstract

8546 Background: Early detection reduces lung cancer (LC) mortality. We prospectively evaluated LC patients diagnosed through Lung Cancer Screening (LCS) or an Incidental Lung Nodule Program (ILNP) (‘early detection’ programs) compared to routinely diagnosed LC patients in a multidisciplinary program (MDP). Methods: We compare demographics, tumor characteristics, and survival between the three groups diagnosed within the same healthcare system from 2015-2018. The ILNP prospectively tracks patients with suspicious lung lesions on routinely-performed studies flagged by radiologists using a standard macro text. LCS used Medicare eligibility criteria. Statistical methods include the chi-square test, Kruskal-Wallis test, and proportional hazards models with hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals. Results: ILNP detected 201 lung cancers from 4713 scans (4.3%), LCS yielded 35 lung cancers from 1540 low-dose CT scans (2.3%), while MDC had 926 LC cases not detected by LCS or ILNP. Mean age at diagnosis for ILNP/LCS/MDC was 70/69/67 years (p = 0.0083); African Americans were under-represented in LCS (25%/11%/32%, p = 0.0104). LCS had the highest proportion with commercial insurance (46%/54%/43%, p = 0.3442). Early detection groups were more likely to have adenocarcinoma histology (ILNP/LCS/MDC: 61%/57%/49%, p = 0.0113). Smoking exposure was highest in LCS cohort (mean pack years: 48/64/52, p = 0.0500); 11% of ILNP, 8% MDC patients were never-smokers. Only 36% ILNP and 39% MDC patients were eligible for LCS by NLST criteria and 30%/40% by NELSON criteria. Reasons for ineligibility included smoking status in 73-90% and age in 7-27% of patients. Stage I/II distribution was (66%/58%/21%, p < 0.0001), stage IV 15%/20%/36%; surgical resection rates were (56%/55%/31%, p < 0.0001). Overall survival was longer in early detection groups (LCS HR: 0.31 [0.11,0.82]; ILNP HR: 0.51[0.33,0.81]) compared to MDC (p = 0.0011). Conclusions: The majority of LC patients were ineligible for LCS, but the ILNP identified LC in a high proportion of such patients, with similar stage re-distribution, curative-intent treatment, and survival rates. Structured ILNP complement LCS for early LC detection, such programs need to be built out.

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
37
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3ec9a8bc63905663de99a7044c0bfe36
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2019.37.15_suppl.8546