| Literature DB >> 26645413 |
J K Field1, S W Duffy2, D R Baldwin3, D K Whynes4, A Devaraj5, K E Brain6, T Eisen7, J Gosney8, B A Green1, J A Holemans9, T Kavanagh10, K M Kerr11, M Ledson9, K J Lifford6, F E McRonald1, A Nair12, R D Page9, M K B Parmar13, D M Rassl14, R C Rintoul14, N J Screaton14, N J Wald2, D Weller15, P R Williamson1, G Yadegarfar1, D M Hansell5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lung cancer screening using low-dose CT (LDCT) was shown to reduce lung cancer mortality by 20% in the National Lung Screening Trial.Entities:
Keywords: Imaging/CT MRI etc; Lung Cancer
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26645413 PMCID: PMC4752629 DOI: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2015-207140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thorax ISSN: 0040-6376 Impact factor: 9.139
Figure 1UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS) trial recruitment and implementation process. LDCT, low-dose CT scan; MDT, multidisciplinary team.
Figure 2UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS) nodule care pathway management protocol. LDCT, low-dose CT scan; MDT, multidisciplinary team; VDT, volume doubling time.
Figure 3Participant flow from initial contact to CT screening.
Figure 4Percentage of UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS) positive responders (n=75 958) with a Liverpool Lung Project (LLPv2) risk of >5%, by individual age.
Demographic, risk and medical characteristics of n=4055 individuals randomised to the UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS) intervention (CT screen) and control (non-screen) trial arms
| Total n=4055 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Screen arm (n=2028) | Control arm (n=2027) | |
| Male:female ratio | 1529:499 (3.06:1) | 1507:520 (2.90:1) |
| North:south ratio | 1023:1005 (1.02:1) | 1023:1004 (1.02:1) |
| Mean (SD) age, years | 67.1 (4.1) | 66.9 (4.1) |
| Median age, years | 67 | 67 |
| Median IMD rank* | 17 374 | 17 704 |
| Mean (SD) LLPv2 score | 8.87 (5.12) | 8.83 (4.71) |
| Median LLPv2 score | 7.11 | 7.35 |
| Never smokers | 2 (0.1) | 0 (0%) |
| Current smokers | 777 (38.3%) | 791 (39.0%) |
| Ex-smokers | 1249 (61.6%) | 1236 (61.0%) |
| Smoking duration 10–19 years† | 117 (5.8%) | 116 (5.7%) |
| Smoking duration 20+ years† | 1895 (93.4%) | 1907 (94.1%) |
| Smoking duration unknown† | 14 (0.7%) | 4 (0.2%) |
| % Asbestos exposed | 763 (37.6%) | 763 (37.6%) |
| % with history of respiratory disease‡ | 1056 (52.1%) | 1023 (50.5%) |
| % with history of blood cancer§ | 26 (1.28%) | 31 (1.53%) |
| % with history of solid tumour¶ | 378 (18.6%) | 396 (19.5%) |
| Total % with family history of lung cancer | 498 (24.6%) | 554 (27.3%) |
| % with family history of lung cancer <60 years | 215 (10.6%) | 215 (10.6%) |
| % with family history of lung cancer >60 years | 283 (14.0%) | 339 (16.7%) |
| Family history of other cancer (not lung)** | 1026 (50.6%) | 1019 (50.3%) |
*Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) rank (https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/english-indices-of-deprivation).
†All smoking duration figures refer to current and ex-smokers combined.
‡Asthma, bronchitis, TB, pneumonia, COPD or emphysema.
§Leukaemia or lymphoma, including Hodgkin's.
¶Cancers of brain, head and neck, oesophagus, breast, colon or ‘other’.
**Cancers of brain, head and neck, oesophagus, breast, colon or ‘other’.
LLP, Liverpool Lung Project.
Numbers of UKLS individuals in each Nodule category; MDT referral and the number of confirmed lung cancers.
| Nodule category (management) | Cat 1 (discharged) | Cat 2 (repeat scan at 12 months) | Cat 3 (repeat scan at 3 months then 12 months) | Cat 4 (immediate MDT referral) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number in category | 979 | 479 | 472 | 64 | 1994 |
| Number referred to MDT | 0 (N/A) | 7 | 43 | 64 | 114 |
| Number of confirmed lung cancers | 0 (N/A) | 1 | 9 | 32 | 42 |
MDT, multidisciplinary team.
Lung cancer diagnosed in pilot UK Lung Cancer Screening (UKLS)
| UKLS case No | Baseline nodule category* | Sex | Age | TNM | Final Stage | Diagnosis | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 | M | 59 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 2 | 4 | M | 66 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 3 | 4 | M | 66 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 4 | 4 | M | 55 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 5 | 4 | M | 63 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 6 | 4 | F | 64 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 7 | 4 | M | 67 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Small cell carcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 8 | 4 | M | 62 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 9 | 4 | M | 68 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 10 | 4 | M | 67 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 11 | 4 | M | 73 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 12 | 4 | M | 71 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 13 | 4 | M | 72 | cT1b cN0 cM0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Radiotherapy |
| 14 | 4 | M | 64 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 15 | 4 | M | 68 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 16 | 4 | M | 74 | cT1a cN0 cM0 | IA | Bronchogenic carcinoma | Palliative |
| 17 | 4 | M | 69 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 18 | 4 | M | 70 | pT2a pN0 | IB | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 19 | 4 | M | 67 | pT2a pN0 | IB | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 20 | 4 | M | 68 | pT2a pN1 | IIA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 21 | 4 | F | 67 | pT1a pN1 | IIA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 22 | 4 | F | 64 | pT2b pN0 | IIA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 23 | 4 | F | 73 | pT2a pN1 | IIA | Small cell carcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 24 | 4 | M | 63 | pT1a pN1 | IIA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 25 | 4 | M | 75 | pT2a pN1 | IIA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 26 | 4 | M | 64 | pT2b pN0 | IIA | Carcinoid | Surgery |
| 27 | 4 | M | 68 | pT1a pN2 | IIIA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 28 | 4 | F | 69 | pT1b pN2 | IIIA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery/chemotherapy |
| 29 | 4 | M | 63 | cT1a cN2 cM0 | IIIA | Small cell carcinoma | Chemotherapy |
| 30 | 4 | F | 60 | pT3 pN0 | IIB | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery/radiotherapy |
| 31 | 4 | M | 66 | cT4 cN3 cM1b | IV | Adenocarcinoma | Chemotherapy/radiotherapy |
| 32 | 4 | M | 64 | cT3 cN2 cM1b | IV | Squamous cell carcinoma | Palliative |
| 33 | 3 (3 months) | M | 68 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma (two primaries) | Surgery |
| 34 | 3 (12 months) | M | 69 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 35 | 3 (12 months) | M | 61 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 36 | 3 (12 months) | M | 70 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 37 | 3 (3 months) | F | 70 | pT1aNx† | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 38 | 3 (12 months) | M | 66 | pT1b pN0 | IA | Squamous cell carcinoma | Surgery |
| 39 | 3 (12 months) | F | 69 | cT1a cN0 cM0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Radiotherapy |
| 40 | 3 (12 months) | M | 71 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
| 41 | 3 (12 months) | F | 75 | cT4 cN2 cM1b | IV | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery (non-pulmonary) Radiotherapy/chemotherapy |
| 42 | 2 | F | 66 | pT1a pN0 | IA | Adenocarcinoma | Surgery |
*Baseline nodule category—category 4 referred to MDT at baseline, category 3 referred for repeat CT at 3 months and 12 months, category 2 referred for 12 month repeat CT.
†Participant underwent wedge resection. Clinical stage was cT1a cN0 cM0.
MDT, multidisciplinary team.
Comparison of cost-effectiveness approaches used in the National Lung Cancer Screening Trial (NLST) and UK Lung Cancer Screening(UKLS)
| UKLS | NLST | Consequence (USA compared with the UK) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yield=2.1% of persons screened | Yield=2.0% of persons screened | Similar yield |
| 2 | Single prevalence screen. | 3 screens to produce similar yield |
Far more resources devoted to initial detection in USA Any US resource has a higher unit cost |
| 3 | Net treatment costs per person (screen-detected vs no screening)=£60=$92 | Net treatment costs per person (screen detected vs no screening)=$175 | US costs treatment costs higher |
| 4 | Costs of patient time and travel to appointments are NOT included in total costs:
the evaluation adopts an NHS perspective, as recommended by NICE | Costs of patient time and travel to appointments are included in total cost:
the evaluation adopts a social perspective, as recommended by the US Panel on Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine | Inclusion of patient costs makes US screening and management appear to be more expensive (and less cost effective) |
| 5 | Outcome estimate calculations based on life table survival estimates | Outcome estimates calculations based on life table survival estimates | Similar life table survival estimation method used in both trials |
| 6 | Incremental quality adjusted life years (QALYs) gained per person screened=0.03 | Incremental QALYs gained per person screened=0.02 overall, but 0.03 in the age range 60–69 | Gains per person screened appear essentially similar |
| 7 | UKLS modelling based on 1 year | NLST | Allowing for the fact that the medical care in the USA is more expensive than the UK, the NLST ICER would be at least halved, if the screening had been confined to the two highest risk quintiles |
NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.