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Pack-Year Smoking History: An Inadequate and Biased Measure to Determine Lung Cancer Screening Eligibility

Alexandra L. Potter, Nuo Xu, Priyanka Senthil, Deepti Srinivasan, Hang Lee, G. Scott Gazelle, Lydia Chelala, Wei Zheng, Florian J. Fintelmann, Lecia V. Sequist, Jessica Donington, Julie R. Palmer, Chi‐Fu Jeffrey Yang

2024Journal of Clinical Oncology61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Pack-year smoking history is an imperfect and biased measure of cumulative tobacco exposure. The use of pack-year smoking history to determine lung cancer screening eligibility in the current US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) guideline may unintentionally exclude many high-risk individuals, especially those from racial and ethnic minority groups. It is unclear whether using a smoking duration cutoff instead of a smoking pack-year cutoff would improve the selection of individuals for screening. METHODS: We analyzed 49,703 individuals with a smoking history from the Southern Community Cohort Study (SCCS) and 22,126 individuals with a smoking history from the Black Women's Health Study (BWHS) to assess eligibility for screening under the USPSTF guideline versus a proposed guideline that replaces the ≥20-pack-year criterion with a ≥20-year smoking duration criterion. RESULTS: < .001). Under the proposed guideline, the percentage of Black and White patients with lung cancer who would have qualified for screening increased to 85.3% and 82.0%, respectively, eradicating the disparity in screening eligibility between the groups. In the BWHS, using a 20-year smoking duration cutoff instead of a 20-pack-year cutoff increased the percentage of Black women with lung cancer who would have qualified for screening from 42.5% to 63.8%. CONCLUSION: Use of a 20-year smoking duration cutoff instead of a 20-pack-year cutoff greatly increases the proportion of patients with lung cancer who would qualify for screening and eliminates the racial disparity in screening eligibility between Black versus White individuals; smoking duration has the added benefit of being easier to calculate and being a more precise assessment of smoking exposure compared with pack-year smoking history.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLung cancerLung cancer screeningMeasure (data warehouse)CancerEnvironmental healthSmoking historyOncologyInternal medicineComputer scienceDatabaseLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentSmoking Behavior and CessationLung Cancer Treatments and Mutations