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Impact of lung cancer screening on stage migration and mortality among the national Veterans Health Administration population with lung cancer

Donna M. Edwards, Mina Pirzadeh, Tony Van, Ralph Jiang, Akshay Tate, Grace Schaefer, Jadyn G. James, Caroline Bishop, Cydnee Wilson, Nicholas M. Nedzesky, Aaren Alseri, Anthony Leveque, Amanda Malus, Akbar K. Waljee, David A. Elliott, Jane C. Deng, Ann G. Schwartz, Matthew J. Schipper, Alex K. Bryant, Nithya Ramnath, Michael D. Green

2024Cancer10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite randomized trials demonstrating a mortality benefit to low-dose computed tomography screening to detect lung cancer, uptake of lung cancer screening (LCS) has been slow, and the benefits of screening remain unclear in clinical practice. METHODS: This study aimed to assess the impact of screening among patients in the Veterans Health Administration (VA) health care system diagnosed with lung cancer between 2011 and 2018. Lung cancer stage at diagnosis, lung cancer-specific survival, and overall survival between patients with cancer who did and did not receive screening before diagnosis were evaluated. We used Cox regression modeling and inverse propensity weighting analyses with lead time bias adjustment to correlate LCS exposure with patient outcomes. RESULTS: Of 57,919 individuals diagnosed with lung cancer in the VA system between 2011 and 2018, 2167 (3.9%) underwent screening before diagnosis. Patients with screening had higher rates of stage I diagnoses (52% vs. 27%; p ≤ .0001) compared to those who had no screening. Screened patients had improved 5-year overall survival rates (50.2% vs. 27.9%) and 5-year lung cancer-specific survival (59.0% vs. 29.7%) compared to unscreened patients. Among screening-eligible patients who underwent National Comprehensive Cancer Network guideline-concordant treatment, screening resulted in substantial reductions in all-cause mortality (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 0.79; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.67-0.92; p = .003) and lung-specific mortality (aHR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.50-0.74; p < .001). CONCLUSIONS: While LCS uptake remains limited, screening was associated with earlier stage diagnoses and improved survival. This large national study corroborates the value of LCS in clinical practice; efforts to widely adopt this vital intervention are needed.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLung cancer screeningLung cancerHazard ratioCancerInternal medicineNational Lung Screening TrialConfidence intervalPopulationProportional hazards modelStage (stratigraphy)Cancer screeningOncologyEnvironmental healthPaleontologyBiologyLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentLung Cancer Treatments and MutationsGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening