Santa Fe New Mexican

Few smokers seek free lung scans

- By Marilynn Marchione

Lung cancer screening has proved to be stunningly unpopular. Five years after government and private insurers started paying for it, less than 2 percent of eligible current and former smokers have sought the free scans, researcher­s report.

The study didn’t explore why, but experts say possible explanatio­ns include worries about false alarms and follow-up tests, a doctor visit to get the scans covered, fear and denial of the consequenc­es of smoking and little knowledge that screening exists.

“People are not aware that this is a test that can actually save lives,” said Dr. Richard Schilsky. “It’s not invasive, it’s not painful, there’s no prep, nothing has to be stuck into any body cavity,” so to see so little use “is shocking.”

Schilsky is chief medical officer of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, which released the study Wednesday in advance of the group’s meeting next month.

Lung cancer is the top cancer killer worldwide, causing 155,000 deaths in the United States each year.

It’s usually found too late for treatment to succeed.

A big study found that annual low-dose CT scans, a type of X-ray, could find cases sooner and lower the risk of dying of lung cancer by 20 percent for those at highest risk.

That’s people ages 55 through 79 who smoked a pack of cigarettes a day for 30 years or the equivalent, such as two packs a day for 15 years.

In 2013, a government task force and others backed screening for such folks. The scans cost $100 to $250 and are free for those who meet the criteria, but people must have a special appointmen­t to discuss risks and

benefits with a doctor.

Dr. Danh Pham at the University of Louisville in Kentucky and others got informatio­n on how many scans were done from an American College of Radiology registry of all 1,800 sites in the U.S. accredited to perform them.

A federal health study was used to estimate how many current and former smokers were eligible.

The results: In 2016, less than 2 percent of 7.6 million eligible smokers were screened. Rates ranged from 1 percent in the West to 3.5 percent in the Northeast. That’s way below the 60 percent to 80 percent rates for breast, colon or cervical cancer screening.

The study was sponsored by the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation. One study leader has consulted for the company and other cancer drugmakers.

But screening has a dark side: Research shows that over three years of annual scans, 40 percent of people will have an abnormal finding that often leads to followup tests such as a lung biopsy, and complicati­ons of those can be fatal, said Dr. Otis Brawley, the American Cancer Society’s chief medical officer.

“I’m committed to telling people the truth and letting people decide for themselves,” Brawley said, but added that if he were a candidate for screening, “I don’t think I would do it.”

Dr. Kenneth Lin, a Georgetown family physician and former staff doctor for the government task force that advised screening, also isn’t a fan.

“There’s been a lot of skepticism” about its value, and the American Academy of Family Physicians has not endorsed it, Lin said. Many doctors feel the effort is better spent trying to get smokers to quit, he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A doctor works with a patient in a CT scanner at Southern New Hampshire Medical Center in Nashua, N.H. According to a study released Wednesday, less than 2 percent of eligible smokers have sought free lung cancer screening.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A doctor works with a patient in a CT scanner at Southern New Hampshire Medical Center in Nashua, N.H. According to a study released Wednesday, less than 2 percent of eligible smokers have sought free lung cancer screening.

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