| Literature DB >> 31361789 |
Yufan Chen1, Tina R Watson1, Steven D Criss1, Andrew Eckel1, Lauren Palazzo1, Deirdre F Sheehan1, Chung Yin Kong1,2.
Abstract
More than 50% of the world's lung cancer cases occur in Asia and more than 20% of cancer deaths in Asia are attributable to lung cancer. The U.S. National Lung Screening Trial has shown that lung cancer screening with computed tomography (CT) can reduce lung cancer deaths. Using the Lung Cancer Policy Model-Asia (LCPM-Asia), we estimated the potential mortality reduction achievable through the implementation of CT-based lung cancer screening in China, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea. The LCPM-Asia was calibrated to the smoking prevalence of each of the aforementioned countries based on published national surveys and to lung cancer mortality rates from the World Health Organization. The calibrated LCPM-Asia was then used to simulate lung cancer deaths under screening and no-screening scenarios for the four countries. Using screening eligibility criteria recommended by the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), which are based on age and smoking history, we estimated the lung cancer mortality reduction from screening through year 2040. By 2040, lung cancer screening would result in 91,362 life-years gained and 4.74% mortality reduction in South Korea; 290,325 life-years gained and 4.33% mortality reduction in Japan; 3,014,215 life-years gained and 4.22% mortality reduction in China; and 8,118 life-years gained and 3.76% mortality reduction in Singapore. As for mortality reduction by smoker type, current smokers would have the greatest mortality reduction in each country, ranging from 5.56% in Japan to 6.86% in Singapore. Among the four countries, lung cancer screening under CMS eligibility criteria was most effective in South Korea and least effective in Singapore. Singapore's low smoking prevalence and South Korea's aging population and higher smoking prevalence may partially explain the discrepancy in effectiveness. CT screening was shown to be promising as a means of reducing lung cancer mortality in the four countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31361789 PMCID: PMC6667161 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0220610
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Lung Cancer Policy Model–Asia input parameters and calibration targets.
| China | Japan | Singapore | South Korea | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male-Age 30±65: 0.02; Age >65: 0.03 / Female-Age >35: 0.02 | The same as China | The same as China | The same as China | |||
| Levy et al 2014 | ||||||
| Male by age in 2006 (Chen, average of urban and rural)—Age 37: 16.56; Age 46: 17.44; Age 55: 15.76; Age 66: 13.2; Age 74: 12.2; Male and female by year (Ng)—1980: 15.5 (13.9, 17.1); 1996: 18.2 (17.3, 19.1); 2006: 21.8 (20.6, 23.0); 2012: 22.3 (20.7, 24.4); Male by year (Qian, calculated)—1998: 15.8; 2003: 21.3; Female by year (Qian, calculated)—1998: 12.3; 2003: 15.8 | In 2007—Male: <10 19.1%, 10–19 48.6%, >20 32.3%; Female: <10 34.4%, 10–19 52.8%, >20 12.8% | In 2004—Male: <10 35%, 10–19 48%, >20 17%; Female: <10 67%, 10–19 26%, >20 7% | In 2010—Male: <10 34.4%, 10–19 52.8%, >20 12.8%; Female: <10 41.1%, 10–19 49.3%, >20 9.5% | |||
| Chen et al 2015; Ng et al 2015; Qian et al 2010 | Tabuchi et al 2016 | National Health Survey | Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) | |||
| Individualized based on age and sex | Individualized based on age and sex | Individualized based on age and sex | Individualized based on age and sex | |||
| Global Burden of Disease; 1990 and 2010 | Global Burden of Disease, 1990 and 2010 | Global Burden of Disease, 1990 and 2010 | Global Burden of Disease, 1990 and 2010 | |||
| Male: 44.8% / Female: 2% | Male: 26.6% / Female: 9.3% | Male: 17.9% / Female: 6.3% | Male: 33.5% / Female: 8.8% | |||
| China Health and Nutrition Survey | JT's Annual Japan Smoking Rate Survey; National Health and Nutrition Survey | National Health Survey; National Health Surveillance Survey | Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) | |||
| Male 422,000 / Female: 175,000 | Male: 53,976 / Female: 21,367 | Male: 1,083 / Female: 507 | Male: 12,783% / Female: 5,065 | |||
| GLOBOCAN | GLOBOCAN | GLOBOCAN | GLOBOCAN |
Given the insufficient information on smoking cessation rates in Japan, South Korea and Singapore, we applied the smoking cessation rate in China to the other countries.
a GLOBOCAN: Datasets about the global burden of cancer released by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
Fig 1Smoking prevalence calibration.
Model smoking prevalence (lines) calibrated to actual data from each country’s survey (dots). (A) Male. (B) Female.
Fig 2Lung cancer mortality calibration.
Model lung cancer mortality calibrated to data from GLOBOCAN. GLOBOCAN: Datasets about the global burden of cancer released by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). (A) China. (B) Japan. (C) Singapore. (D) South Korea.
Projected population and number of screening-eligible individuals, 2020–2040.
| 2020 | 2030 | 2040 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,384,545,220 | 1,391,490,898 | 1,358,518,748 | ||
| 28,622,658 | 30,570,342 | 27,603,631 | ||
| 125,507,472 | 120,751,317 | 114,448,328 | ||
| 3,419,291 | 2,694,940 | 2,322,707 | ||
| 6,209,660 | 7,222,632 | 8,035,916 | ||
| 45,394 | 51,587 | 67,271 | ||
| 51,835,110 | 52,792,497 | 51,328,829 | ||
| 1,451,977 | 1,449,188 | 1,238,713 |
Fig 3Number of people eligible for screening, 2020–2040.
Y-axis uses a logarithmic scale.
Fig 4Percentage of population eligible for screening, 2020–2040.
Projected lung cancer morality reduction and deaths avoided by smoker type, 2020–2040.
| Total | Current smoker | Former smoker | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortality reduction | Deaths avoided | Mortality reduction | Deaths avoided | Mortality reduction | Deaths avoided | |
| 4.22% | 471,095 | 5.98% | 328,959 | 4.07% | 142,137 | |
| 4.33% | 45,774 | 5.56% | 32,066 | 3.69% | 13,708 | |
| 3.76% | 1,290 | 6.86% | 909 | 4.62% | 381 | |
| 4.74% | 14,504 | 6.75% | 10,089 | 4.68% | 4,415 | |
Fig 5Cumulative mortality reduction by year, 2020–2040.
Fig 6Annual mortality reduction by year, 2020–2040.
Projected life-years gained, 2020–2040.
| China | Japan | Singapore | South Korea | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,014,215 | 290,325 | 8,118 | 91,362 | |
| 471,095 | 45,774 | 1,290 | 14,504 | |
| 6.40 | 6.34 | 6.29 | 6.30 |
Sensitivity analysis: Mortality reduction through 2040 with varying smoking intensity and cessation rate.
| Original scenario | Optimistic scenario | Pessimistic scenario | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4.219% | 4.215% | 4.223% | ||
| 471,095 | 470,542 | 471,727 | ||
| 4.329% | 4.327% | 4.333% | ||
| 45,774 | 45,743 | 45,823 | ||
| 3.765% | 3.757% | 3.775% | ||
| 1,290 | 1,287 | 1,294 | ||
| 4.739% | 4.738% | 4.750% | ||
| 14,504 | 15,501 | 15,549 |
In the optimistic alternative, smoking cessation rates were 20% higher and mean cigarettes per day, or smoking intensity, 20% lower for future birth cohorts after 1981 from the year 2011. In the pessimistic scenario, smoking cessation rates were 20% lower and smoking intensity 20% higher beginning with the same year and birth cohort