Factors affecting patient adherence to lung cancer screening: A multisite analysis

Author:

Stowell Justin T1ORCID,Narayan Anand K2,Wang Gary X2,Fintelmann Florian J2,Flores Efren J2ORCID,Sharma Amita2,Petranovic Milena2,Shepard Jo-Anne O2,Little Brent P2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL, USA

2. Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

Objective To identify factors associated with delayed adherence to follow-up in lung cancer screening. Methods Utilizing a data warehouse and lung cancer screening registry, variables were collected from a referred sample of 3110 unique participants with follow-up CT during the study period (1 January 2016 to 17 October 2018). Adherence was defined as undergoing chest CT within 90 days and 30 days of the recommended time for follow-up and was determined using proportions and multiple variable logistic regression models across the American College of Radiology Lung Imaging Reporting and Data System (Lung-RADS®) categories. Results Of 1954 lung cancer screening participants (51.9% (1014/1954) males, 48.1% (940/1954) female; mean age 65.7 (range 45–87), smoking history median 40 pack-years, 60.2% and 44.5% did not follow-up within 30 and 90 days, respectively. Participants receiving Lung-RADS® category 1 or 2 presented later than those with Lung-RADS® category 3 at 90 days (coefficient −27.24, 95% CI −51.31, −3.16, p = 0.027). Participants with Lung-RADS® category 1 presented later than those with Lung-RADS® category 2 at both 90- and 30-days past due (OR 0.76 95% CI [0.59–0.97], p = 0.029 and OR 0.63 95% CI [0.48–0.83], p = 0.001, respectively). Conclusions Adherence to follow-up was higher among participants receiving more suspicious Lung-RADS® results at index screening CT and among those who had undergone more non-lung cancer screening imaging examinations prior to index lung cancer screening CT. These observations may inform strategies aimed at prospectively identifying participants at risk for delayed or nonadherence to prevent potential morbidity and mortality from incident lung cancers.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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