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Lung cancer screening with spiral CT

Authors :
Enzo Angeli
Massimo Roncalli
Maurizio Chiarenza
Marco Alloisio
Giuseppe Aranzulla
Eliseo Passera
Federico Cappuzzo
Armando Santoro
Matteo Incarbone
Alberto Testori
G Chiesa
Silvio Cavuto
Giorgio Brambilla
Fabio Romano Lutman
Umberto Cariboni
Gianluigi Ravasi
Maurizio Infante
Anna Destro
Source :
Lung Cancer. 59:355-363
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Summary Background Despite the high survival rates reported for screening-detected cases, the potential of screening of high-risk subjects for reducing lung cancer mortality is still unproven. We herewith present the baseline results of a randomized trial comparing screening for lung cancer with annual spiral computed tomography (CT) versus a yearly clinical review. Methods Male subjects, 60–74 years old, and smokers of 20+ pack-years were enrolled. All participants received a baseline medical examination, chest X-rays (CXR) and sputum cytology upon accrual. Subjects randomized in the spiral CT group received a spiral CT scan at baseline, then yearly for the following 4 years. For controls, a yearly clinical examination was scheduled for the following 4 years. Results 2472 subjects were randomized (1276 spiral CT arm, 1196 controls). Age, smoking exposure and co-morbid conditions were similar in the two groups. In the spiral CT group, 28 lung cancers were detected, 13 of which were visible in the baseline chest X-rays (overall prevalence 2.2%). Sixteen out of 28 tumours (57%) were stage I, and 19 (68%) were resectable. In the control group, eight cases were detected by the baseline chest X-rays (prevalence rate 0.67%), four (50%) were stage I, and six (75%) were resectable. Conclusions Baseline lung cancer detection rate in the spiral CT arm was higher than in most published studies. The stage I detection rate was increased four-fold by spiral CT versus chest X-rays. However, more tumours in an advanced stage were also detected by CT. The high resection rate of screening-detected patients suggests a possible increase in cure rate. However, longer follow-up is required for definitive conclusions. This trial has been registered at www.Clinicaltrials.gov , registration No. NCT00420862 .

Details

ISSN :
01695002
Volume :
59
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lung Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cd3e79a3954c398145cf8ce9a5a284ab