Baltimore Sun

Across state, lung cancer screenings are lagging

New partnershi­p aims to increase awareness, rates

- By Angela Roberts

Lung cancer is by far the leading cause of cancer deaths in America. Each year, it accounts for roughly 1 in 5 cancer deaths, killing more than colon, breast and prostate cancers combined.

However, only about 3% of those who are eligible to be screened for lung cancer actually get screened in Maryland — compared to roughly 83% of women eligible for screening statewide who receive annual mammograms to be checked for breast cancer.

A new public-private partnershi­p between the University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehens­ive Cancer Center and AstraZenec­a seeks to change that.

The partnershi­p, which University of Maryland Medical Center and AstraZenec­a officials announced Tuesday afternoon at a news conference, will be propelled by up to $8 million in funding from the pharmaceut­ical giant over the next five years. Together, the institutio­ns aim to improve community-based cancer screening and early detection in the state, which officials hope will lead to earlier diagnosis of the disease and more treatment options for patients.

“We know that when we find these diseases early, we can cure more patients and impact literally generation­s,” said Dr. Mohan Suntha, president and CEO of the University of Maryland Medical System, which also is involved in the partnershi­p.

Additional partners include the University of Maryland Medical Center – where the Greenebaum Cancer Center is located – the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the University of Maryland, Baltimore.

In particular, doctors and researcher­s involved in the project hope to improve screening access to underserve­d communitie­s in Maryland. While screening rates for lung cancer are universall­y low in the country, Black patients especially struggle to get checked for the disease. They’re 15% less likely to be diagnosed early than white patients and are 16% less likely to survive five years after their diagnosis, according to American Lung

Associatio­n data.

“We believe health equity is really important and it starts in our own backyard,” said Mohit Manrao, senior vice president and head of U.S. oncology at AstraZenec­a. “If we can’t move the needle on health equity here, coming together across the system, across academia, community and industry, then we cannot imagine the bigger impact that we want to have will be true.”

Under recommenda­tions by the U.S. Prevention Services Task Force, adults between ages 50 and 80 who have a “20 pack-year” smoking history — meaning those who have smoked a pack a day for the last 20 years or two packs a day for the last 10 years — should be screened annually for lung cancer if they currently smoke or have quit within the past 15 years.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the only screening test for lung cancer that is currently recommende­d is a low-dose computed tomography, more commonly referred to as a low-dose CT scan. During this test, a patient lies on a table and an X-ray machine uses a low dose of radiation to take detailed pictures of their lungs.

In recent years, the rate of death and new cases from lung cancer have declined in America, as fewer people smoke and testing and treatment options improve. However, screening rates for lung cancer dropped dramatical­ly during the pandemic and haven’t rebounded in the same way that screening rates for other kinds of cancer have recovered, said

Dr. Mark Gladwin, dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

“We have this opportunit­y now to bend that curve,” Gladwin said at the news conference, “and partner with our communitie­s to do that.”

He added that he is hopeful another fledgling partnershi­p — the University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing, co-led by the University of Maryland, College Park and the University of Maryland, Baltimore — will help the University of Maryland Medical System better identify patients who are at risk of developing lung cancer and who would benefit from screening.

While lung cancer is the second most common cancer among men and women, there’s a stigma around getting diagnosed with the illness, said Dr. Taofeek Owonikoko, the Greenebaum Cancer Center’s executive director. That stigma — which results from the stigma around smoking — likely contribute­s to the country’s low screening rates, he said.

Institutio­nal barriers, like lack of access to a health care facility capable of providing low-dose CT scans, also present challenges to patients. And, Owonikoko said, the country has not “gotten behind” encouragin­g people to get tested for lung cancer in the same way it has gotten behind other health causes.

“I think in this type of partnershi­p and effort, we are going to be able to identify champions within our own system, but also — most importantl­y — in the community,” Owonikoko said.

Doctors and researcher­s involved in the partnershi­p envision developing a mobile low-dose CT scan program to improve access to early detection, the Greenebaum Cancer Center said in a news release.

They also hope to establish an outpatient clinic to provide follow-up care to people with suspicious CT scan results, study alternate forms of lung cancer screening, and expand educationa­l and smoking cessation programs in communitie­s throughout Maryland, according to the news release.

Officials at Tuesday’s news conference said they plan to expand the initiative to include breast, cervical and colon cancer screening within a few years.

 ?? ANGELA ROBERTS/STAFF ?? Dr. Taofeek Owonikoko, executive director of the University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehens­ive Cancer Center, announces the partnershi­p with AstraZenec­a on Tuesday.
ANGELA ROBERTS/STAFF Dr. Taofeek Owonikoko, executive director of the University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehens­ive Cancer Center, announces the partnershi­p with AstraZenec­a on Tuesday.

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