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* From the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (Dr. Bach and Ms. Hanger), New York, NY; The Medical University of South Carolina (Dr. Silvestri), Charleston, SC; and The Mayo Clinic (Dr. Jett), Rochester, MN.
Correspondence to: Peter B. Bach, MD, FCCP, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 307 East 63rd St, Third Floor, New York, NY 10021
| Abstract |
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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.
Results: Studies of lung cancer screening with chest radiograph and sputum cytology have failed to 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 will benefit or harm. Although researchers are conducting randomized trials of low-dose CT, results will 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.
Key Words: biomolecular markers chest radiograph low-dose CT lung cancer screening sputum cytology
| Introduction |
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Exhaustive reviews of lung cancer screening techniques have been published elsewhere, including one published by the American College of Chest Physicians in 2003.2 All of these reports are in near complete consensus that screening for lung cancer with either CXR or sputum cytology is not appropriate.2
| Materials and Methods |
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| Results |
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Because very limited data regarding the impact of any of the new screening modalities on patient outcomes have become available since the publication of our last set of guidelines, our conclusions regarding the efficacy of various approaches to lung cancer screening have not changed meaningfully. They continue to be broadly consistent with those published by other organizations (Table 1 ),3940 and our conclusions are consistent with a recent health technology assessment of lung cancer screening with LDCT, conducted for the National Health Service R&D Health Technology Assessment Programme.3 Many organizations are not yet offering recommendations regarding CT screening in advance of results from the National Lung Screening Trial, a randomized, controlled trial of LDCT. The guidelines that we offer are meant to help physicians and patients discuss the potential risks and benefits of lung cancer screening and to ensure that patients who agree to be screened appreciate that screening for lung cancer with any modality should be considered experimental, and that they are entitled to protections that are afforded all human subjects who agree to participate in research.
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Previous screening studies that evaluated CXR raised some general concerns about screening with any type of imaging. These studies256 showed that although screening does increase the rate of detection of early-stage lung cancers, it fails to reduce the number of late-stage lung cancers or the risk for dying from lung cancer. One possible explanation for this is that screening detects a large number of small, slowly growing, less aggressive lung cancers that are unlikely to progress to a point that they cause clinical disease while missing cancers that advance rapidly and cause the majority of deaths from lung cancer. The phenomenon of detecting more slowly growing cancers through screening is well accepted and is referred to as length-biased sampling. However, the amount of overlap between screening-detected cancers and lung cancers that will ultimately cause death remains uncertain. That LDCT is a more sensitive technology than CXR does not necessarily equate to LDCT finding more aggressive cancers; it could equate to detecting more small, indolent cancers that would have never grown to a size detectable by conventional CXR. If true, then this might mean that rather than benefiting patients more than CXR, LDCT screening could instead lead to more unnecessary and nonbeneficial procedures than CXR.
Natural History of Clinically Apparent and CT-Detected Lung Cancers: Findings on Doubling Rates
Some research has explored use of the volume-doubling rate to predict the threat posed by smaller, screening-detected lung nodules, based on the hypothesis that nodules that are rapidly growing (ie, rapidly "doubling in size") are more likely to cause significant disease. In other words, doubling times are examined on the basis of the assumption that the rate of doubling over a brief time period is at least crudely reflective of a tumors past behavior and can be used as a proxy for the future behavior of the tumor; therefore, rapidly doubling cancers are more likely to continue to double in size rapidly. Even though the simplifying assumption that cancers double at a constant rate undoubtedly is inaccurate, the general model of doubling times can help to delineate differences in behavior between CT-detected lung cancers and the lung cancer that is common in clinical practice. To that end, the model is theoretically useful for evaluating nodules that are detected by CT screening and also for assessing whether CT-detected nodules have a clinical behavior that is as aggressive as lung cancer that is sporadically detected, usually in advanced stages. This issue is also discussed in the chapter addressing solitary pulmonary nodules.
Because the total number of doublings that typically precede cardinal clinical events have been identified and previous estimates of doubling times have been published, it is possible to assess directly whether reported doubling times of CT-detected nodules fits the doubling times that would be most consistent with the natural history of lung cancer, something that can be accomplished by evaluating epidemiologic data.
For instance, previous studies78 estimated that 20 doublings are interposed between the initial cell division and a tumors having a diameter of 1 mm; 22 doublings before a tumor theoretically is visible, and 28 doublings before a tumor clearly is visible by CT screening; 35 doublings before it reaches a size at which it is usually clinically apparent; and 40 to 41 doublings to reach a diameter of 100 mm, at which point it is usually lethal. These key time points are illustrated in Figure 1 .
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Figure 1 illustrates the results of the analysis. If the doubling time is 40 days, for instance, and it takes 22 doublings for a tumor to be visible on CT, then the time from first cell division to visibility is 880 days (40 x 22), or 2.4 years (Fig 1). At this rate, the same tumor will take 3.8 years to reach 35 doublings, which is the size at which it would typically be detected in a clinical setting, and 4.6 years (41 doublings) to reach the size at which it likely causes death. We can also see that the average "lead time" (the time between typical CT and clinical detection) would comprise 7 doublings (35 doublings minus 28 doublings) and so in this case would equate to 280 days (a little more than 9 months). The typical time from clinical detection to death (ie, the "mean survival") would comprise 6 doublings (41 doublings minus 35 doublings), or 240 days (8 months). The same calculations for slower volume doubling rates, which would be more consistent with longer times between key events, are also shown in Figure 1.
We evaluated three pieces of epidemiologic information on the natural history of sporadically detected lung cancer and determined the range of doubling times that fit the data the best:
On the basis of epidemiologic benchmarks and the assumption that the model of doubling time is somewhat robust across the natural history of lung cancer, the evidence suggests that doubling times of approximately 40 to 70 days are most consistent with the natural history of lung cancers that are responsible for most lung cancer deaths. In this light, it is useful to examine reported doubling times in screening studies to help determine to what extent cancers that are detected by screening double at rates that are slower than the rates that are consistent with the natural history of the disease. For instance, Hasegawa et al13 reported that among 61 lung cancers identified by CT screening, the doubling times ranged from 149 to 813 days—all rates much slower than the 40- to 70-day doubling times that best fit the epidemiologic data. Yankelevitz et al14 documented that even CXR screening detects more slowly doubling lung cancers: only a minority of stage I lung cancers that were detected by CXR screening in the landmark New York and Mayo lung screening studies had doubling times < 100 days. By contrast, 35 and 11% of these cancers, respectively, had doubling times > 300 days. In other words, if doubling times are indicative of clinical behavior, then most lung cancers that are detected through screening are quite a bit more indolent than lung cancers that account for most clinical disease.
Cost-effectiveness of LDCT
Researchers have been eager to determine the cost-effectiveness of lung cancer screening, a task made difficult by the absence of efficacy data (Table 2
).15171841 Two studies have examined the cost of a single, "prevalence" screening compared with no screening on the basis of the apparent shift in stage distribution reported in the Early Lung Cancer Action Project (ELCAP) cohort (85% stage I in screening arm vs 21% stage I in the no-screening arm).1516 Both estimated the incremental cost-effectiveness for screening a population with high lung cancer prevalence rates (2.7%, also derived from the ELCAP study) and low lung cancer prevalence rates (
1%) and used similar costs for CT scans. Wisnivesky et al16 estimated that a one-time LDCT scan will cost roughly $2,500 per life-year gained under the assumption of high prevalence and $19,000 per life-year gained under the assumption of low prevalence, assuming a 1.5-year lead-time bias. One-way sensitivity analyses showed that increasing the rate of overdiagnosis to 30% increased cost-effectiveness estimates to roughly $10,000 per life-year; with 50% of cases overdiagnosed, the incremental cost-effectiveness was closer to $80,000.
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At least three additional studies have explored the cost-effectiveness of annual LDCT screening, two of which presented their results in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). A separate study by Marshall et al,17 using the same assumptions about effectiveness described previously, estimated that for an annual screening for 5 years, the incremental cost-effectiveness per QALY was $19,533. Sensitivity analyses considered a 1-year decrease in survival to account for potential confounding by lead-time and overdiagnosis biases, yielding a cost-effectiveness ratio of $50,473 per QALY. Taking a slightly different approach, Mahadevia et al18 stratified individuals by smoking status: continuing, quitting, and former (those who had quit > 5 years earlier). Expected diagnoses and mortality rates were obtained from SEER, and the model was sensitive to the degree of stage shift, adherence to screening, degree of length or overdiagnosis bias, cost of CT, and anxiety about indeterminate nodules. For current smokers, effectiveness was modeled as a 50% stage shift with a resulting 13% decrease in lung cancer mortality during the first 20 years. The incremental cost-effectiveness per QALY gained was $116,300 for current smokers. For quitting and former smokers, the corresponding projections were $558,600 and $2,322,700 per QALY, respectively. In sensitivity analyses, only improbably favorable conditions generated costs within the range of the estimates provided by other studies: $42,500 for current, $75,300 for quitting, and $94,400 for former smokers. It should be noted, however, that this study examined costs over a longer time horizon and considered numerous variables in its baseline model that the other cost-effectiveness studies elected to omit.
Although these analyses are highly speculative, from a public health decision-making perspective, they provide a useful preliminary indication of the practicability of screening for lung cancer. Generally, the models that assume some impact from lead-time bias and the detection of indolent (ie, overdiagnosed) lung cancers generate cost-effectiveness ratios that are fairly unattractive. Analyses that assume that all screening-detected cancers behave like typical clinical lung cancer and that each early-detected cancer displaces a case of advanced lung cancer tend to make screening more appealing. Perhaps a more useful function of these studies is their illustration of the significant impact that defining risk has on the potential cost-effectiveness of screening. Clearly screening only the people who are at very high risk for developing lung cancer will improve the efficiency of the test and its incremental cost-effectiveness; however, identifying the population at greatest risk remains a difficult task. One study19 found that individual risk among smokers varied greatly on the basis of a persons smoking exposure, packs smoked per day, age, gender, and asbestos exposure. However, a large reservoir of cancers may appear in individuals who are at relatively lower risk, of whom there are many, such as groups of former smokers.20 That the incremental cost-effectiveness for LDCT screening can theoretically differ by as much as $2,000,000 according to present smoking status alone shows how critical a rigorous definition of "high risk" would be going forward, assuming that some approach is demonstrated to be beneficial.
LDCT Ongoing and Future Studies
At least two randomized trials of LDCT are under way. The National Lung Screening Trial has randomly assigned 50,000 high-risk smokers, between 55 and 74 years of age, to annual screening with LDCT or CXR at 36 sites in the United States (http://www.cancer.gov/nlst/screeningcenters). The study is designed to have a 90% power to detect a mortality reduction of 20% by 2009. The NELSON trial,21 a collaboration between the Netherlands and Belgium, has randomly assigned 16,000 smokers to LDCT screening intervention at years 1, 2, and 4 or usual care and advice on smoking cessation. Designed to measure cost-effectiveness and powered to detect a 25% mortality reduction > 10 years, the study is set to close in 2016.
Available Estimates of the Impact of LDCT Screening on Lung Cancer Mortality and Survival
Although there are not yet comparative data on the rate of lung cancer mortality among patients who are screened with LDCT compared with what might have happened had individuals not been screened, some preliminary analyses are pessimistic. In a study of 1,520 smokers and former smokers who received 5 years of annual LDCT scans at the Mayo Clinic, Swensen et al22 found that lung cancer incidence and mortality rates were comparable to those in the Mayo Lung Project, after adjusting subsets by age and sex. The Mayo Lung Project was a study of CXR screening that demonstrated no reduction in lung cancer mortality among screened subjects. Patz et al23 modeled the mortality rates for these same patients enrolled in the study at the Mayo Clinic as well as subjects enrolled in one of the ELCAP trials, by estimating the stage-specific number of lung cancer deaths over the person-years at risk in each subset. The findings were then compared with those of the original Mayo Lung Project, in which the lung cancer mortality rates were 4.4 deaths per 1,000 person-years in the intervention arm and 3.9 deaths per 1,000 person-years in the usual care arm. This approach produced estimates of similar or higher mortality rates in the LDCT-screened groups: 4.1 deaths per 1,000 person-years in the Mayo Clinic CT trial and 5.5 deaths per 1,000 person-years in the ELCAP trial.
The international ELCAP reported on the lung cancer-specific survival of 412 subjects who had screening-detected clinical stage I lung cancer, who represented 1.3% of 31,567 subjects who had been screened by the group for lung cancer.24 The investigators reported that this subgroup, which was followed up for a median of 3.3 years, experienced lung cancer-specific survival that was superior to the overall survival of similar patients seen in epidemiologic cohorts. Sobue et al25 also reported that as part of the Anti-Lung Cancer Association Project, 5-year survival for individuals with screening-detected lung cancer was much higher (65 to 76%) than current 5-year survival rates for sporadically detected lung cancers.
These studies that exclusively examine survival of individuals with screening-detected lung cancer have two weaknesses that limit the inferences that can be drawn. For example, in the international ELCAP analysis, there is no information on the outcomes of the 98.7% of subjects who did not have screening-detected stage I lung cancer, so the reader cannot determine whether a large or small number of lung cancer deaths occurred among the subjects. Second, the comparators in these studies are intrinsically biased, because screening improves survival through lead-time and length-time biases, even in the absence of an impact on natural history; therefore, these studies provide limited information regarding the potential benefit or harm of LDCT screening.
| Conclusions |
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Screening With Biomolecular Markers
Several promising biomolecular marker tests, including sputum analysis and screening the breath for volatile organic compounds and DNA alterations, have gained momentum as lung cancer screening techniques. Evaluated primarily in the context of a supplement to CXR in the randomized, controlled trials in the 1970s and 1980s, sputum cytology was not shown to confer any mortality benefit. Because the trials were often underpowered and seldom concentrated on sputum cytology, its discrete efficacy was unclear.26 Newer research is focusing on similarly noninvasive technologies that test for biomarkers that are unique to lung cancer.2728 Although no single marker is likely to indicate malignant nodules, one strategy that tests for volatile organic compounds has shown that the presence of as few as nine compounds may suggest extant lung cancer.2930 More recently, Carpagnano et al31 showed that micro satellite (DNA) alterations that are specific to lung cancer can also be detected in exhaled breath condensate, which may lead to a more sensitive screening tool. In addition, sensor array analysis using an electric nose has shown promising sensitivity (71.4%) and specificity (91.9%) for lung cancer detection and may ultimately be less expensive than laboratory-based screening tests.32
Another evolving screening strategy uses proteomics, identifying patterns of genetic changes in blood and tissue that might signify lung cancer.33 Researchers34 have explored expanding this technique to analyze multiple tumor-associated antibodies at once, which may improve the accuracy of screening tests. A proteomic profile of tissue may also be used to screen for both invasive lung tumors and preinvasive lesions and may help to characterize the entire process of lung tumor development on a molecular level.35 Potentially useful for both screening and monitoring, pattern diagnostic technologies might eventually lead to advancements in therapeutic targeting and customized treatments for patients.36
Biomolecular Markers
Biomolecular marker screening techniques for the early detection of lung cancer are still under investigation. Biomarker screening limits patient exposure to potentially damaging constituents such as radiation and tends to be brief and easy for the patient. It remains unclear whether the tests under development will be associated with excesses of false-positive and false-negative results. Screening with biomarkers requires further clinical validation as well as subsequent cost-effectiveness evaluation before any formal recommendation may be made.
| SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS |
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2. We recommend against the use of serial chest X-rays to screen for the presence of lung cancer. Grade of recommendation, 1A
3. We recommend against the use of single or serial sputum cytologic evaluation to screen for the presence of lung cancer. Grade of recommendation, 1A
| Footnotes |
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The authors have reported to the ACCP that no significant conflicts of interest exist with any companies/organizations whose products or services may be discussed in this article.
Received for publication May 30, 2007. Accepted for publication June 5, 2007.
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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F. W. Grannis Jr, W. M. Alberts, and D. Addrizzo-Harris There Are Major Problems With the American College of Chest Physicians Second Lung Cancer Guidelines Chest, April 1, 2008; 133(4): 1049 - 1051. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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