Five reasons for caution in advocating low-dose computerized tomographic lung cancer screening.

J Thorac Dis

Fariborz Maseeh Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA.

Published: September 2017

The 53.5K-person, low-dose computerized tomographic (LDCT), National Lung Cancer Screening Trial (NLST) achieved a 20% reduction in lung cancer mortality and a 6.7% reduction in all-cause mortality at 6.5-year median follow-up. Failure of European LDCT trials employing null (i.e., unscreened) controls to reproduce this benefit compels caution in adopting a policy of population screening. Additional concerns merit attention: surgical mortality is not trivial; overdiagnosis is substantial; disease-free life expectancy and quality of life are markedly diminished by loss of pulmonary reserve; the combination of overdiagnosis and diminished disease-free life expectancy is pernicious.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5708371PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jtd.2017.08.123DOI Listing

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