Author:
Robbins Hilary A,Berg Christine D,Cheung Li C,Chaturvedi Anil K,Katki Hormuzd A
Abstract
Abstract
Lengthening the annual low-dose computed tomography (CT) screening interval for individuals at lowest risk of lung cancer could reduce harms and improve efficiency. We analyzed 23 328 participants in the National Lung Screening Trial who had a negative CT screen (no ≥4-mm nodules) to develop an individualized model for lung cancer risk after a negative CT. The Lung Cancer Risk Assessment Tool + CT (LCRAT+CT) updates “prescreening risk” (calculated using traditional risk factors) with selected CT features. At the next annual screen following a negative CT, risk of cancer detection was reduced among the 70% of participants with neither CT-detected emphysema nor consolidation (median risk = 0.2%, interquartile range [IQR] = 0.1%–0.3%). However, risk increased for the 30% with CT emphysema (median risk = 0.5%, IQR = 0.3%–0.8%) and the 0.6% with consolidation (median = 1.6%, IQR = 1.0%–2.5%). As one example, a threshold of next-screen risk lower than 0.3% would lengthen the interval for 57.8% of screen-negatives, thus averting 49.8% of next-screen false-positives among screen-negatives but delaying diagnosis for 23.9% of cancers. Our results support that many, but not all, screen-negatives might reasonably lengthen their CT screening interval.
Funder
U.S. National Institutes of Health
National Cancer Institute
Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention, and Control Training
National Research Service
INTEGRAL
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
44 articles.
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