USA TODAY US Edition

Few taking advantage of lung cancer screenings

Experts: Complex criteria may keep patients away

- Karen Weintraub Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

Lung cancer screening has been proven to save lives.

But according to a new study, only 5.8% of people eligible for a free, lowdose CT scan get screened for lung cancer – far below levels seen for colorectal, breast and cervical cancer screens.

Debra Ritzwoller knows the challenges firsthand.

Ritzwoller is a senior investigat­or in economics and cancer research with the Kaiser Permanente Colorado Institute for Health Research. Part of her job via a grant from the National Cancer Institute is to study and promote the use of lung cancer screening among Kaiser’s patients and other health systems. But in five years of trying, she hasn’t managed to get a high-risk close relative screened for the disease.

The relative’s doctor insisted he wasn’t at elevated risk, because he’d quit smoking a decade earlier. Ritzwoller ended up talking to her family member while at the doctor’s and explaining that his age, heavy smoking history, plus having a family member with the disease did put him at high risk. The doctor agreed and ordered the screening exam.

When she last spoke with the family member, he still hadn’t been screened, because he didn’t know how to schedule the screen.

“There’s a lot of folks out there who we’re not reaching,” Ritzwoller said.

Lung cancer remains the deadliest cancer in the United States, claiming an estimated 130,000 lives this year. About 60% are caught after the tumor has spread beyond the lung and is past the point of being cured, said Zach Jump, National Senior Research Director for Epidemiolo­gy and Statistics with the American Lung Associatio­n, who helped lead the new study.

Still, Jump said he’s seen the fiveyear survival rate from lung cancer climb from about 15% when he started working for the lung associatio­n, to more than 25% today. Catching tumors early offers the possibilit­y of even more lives saved, he said. Studies show screening leads to at least a 20% reduction in death from lung cancer.

Screening, which involves a quick CT scan, fully clothed with no advance preparatio­n, has been recommende­d by the federal government only since 2014. In March 2021, criteria were modified to nearly double the number of people eligible for the free scan.

Now, anyone can get the free screen if they are between ages 50 to 80, currently smoke or quit within the past 15 years, and have a 20 pack-year smoking history, meaning they smoked at least 20 cigarettes a day for 20 years or 10 cigarettes daily for 40 years.

That’s a more complicate­d list of criteria than for other cancer screens, which might be one reason people have been slow to adopt lung cancer screening,

Ritzwoller’s family members’ medical chart didn’t indicate how much he had smoked, which is likely why his doctor initially dismissed the idea of screening. Many doctors know only whether their patients are current smokers, not their smoking history.

“There’s a knowledge gap for both the patients and for the providers,” Ritzwoller said.

Then, as with her family member, many people don’t know what to do if they do qualify. The screens are required to be provided at no cost to patients under the Affordable Care Act. People who are part of a program, as at Kaiser, where they’re helped through the process and reminded annually, are more likely to get screened, her data shows.

Lung cancer screening can vary substantia­lly by doctor and treatment facility, suggesting that some are better than others at prioritizi­ng the screens.

In a recent study of the Veterans Health Administra­tion from 2013 to 2021, researcher­s found that the facility where a patient received care accounted for 36% of the variation in screening rates and the doctor accounted for 19% of the difference – more than personal characteri­stics of the veteran.

Making progress

Massachuse­tts leads the country in screening, but only 16% of eligible people have been screened.

“It’s an absolute failing grade and it’s the best grade in the whole country,” said Dr. Jacob Sands, a lung cancer specialist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.

Others at the top of the list include New Hampshire and Vermont, which also have low smoking rates, meaning less of their population is likely at risk.

The one exception is Kentucky, which the new study shows has been relatively successful at getting eligible people screened. The state also has the highest incidence of lung cancer and mortality rates in the country and the second-highest smoking rate, said Shannon Baker, the advocacy director for the American Lung Associatio­n in Kentucky and Tennessee.

“Generation after generation, they have seen lung cancer rear its ugly head and they have seen their family members pass because of it,” Baker said. “Sometimes, I wonder how much of the reluctance to get screened or the reluctance even to get proper care … those things might not be happening as they should be because there is potentiall­y that resignatio­n.”

Yet, over the past last three years, even during the pandemic, Kentucky has screened 5,000 extra people each year, bringing their statewide screening rate up to 13%, above the national average.

Baker credits a broad collaborat­ion that includes her group, area universiti­es and other cancer organizati­ons. They focus on educating providers and patients about the importance of screening. The state legislatur­e also has required an annual report on screening rates, to ensure that quality screening is available statewide.

Black men are more likely to die of from lung cancer with a lower smoking history than their white counterpar­ts, Sands said. The updated guidelines help reduce some inherent disparity in screening by including younger people with less smoking history.

Right now, he said, screening numbers are low for everybody, but it’s important that screening programs are accessible to all population­s as they get developed. In the future, Sands said, risk modeling may be able to better define who would benefit the most from lung cancer screening.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The 2011 National Lung Screening Trial showed a reduction in lung cancer mortality of 20% in high risk patients receiving low-dose CT scans.
GETTY IMAGES The 2011 National Lung Screening Trial showed a reduction in lung cancer mortality of 20% in high risk patients receiving low-dose CT scans.

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