| Literature DB >> 32412305 |
Eduardo Vieira Ponte1, Marcelo Ferretti Fanelli1, Renata Tosoni Rodrigues Ferreira1, Juliana Franceschini Pereira2, Marília Soares E Silva Alcadipane1, Valmar Bião de Lima3, Evaldo Marchi1, Ricardo Sales Dos Santos4.
Abstract
Lung-cancer screening with chest computerized tomography (CT) is not easy to introduce in low-medium resource countries due to cost issues. We investigated whether the increasing availability of chest CT exams in Brazil, in spite of no lung-cancer screening protocol, was associated with lung-cancer death rate along 10-year follow-up. We performed regressions to estimate the rate ratio between chest CT exams and lung-cancer deaths per 105 inhabitants. We stratified data per municipality. Regressions were adjusted for physicians and hospital beds per 105 inhabitants and per capita gross domestic product. Increasing availability of chest CT exams predicted decreasing lung-cancer death rate.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; diagnosis; mortality; screening
Year: 2020 PMID: 32412305 DOI: 10.1080/07357907.2020.1768400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Invest ISSN: 0735-7907 Impact factor: 2.176