|
NLST
results show drop in lung cancer
deaths with CT screening
By
Eric
Barnes
AuntMinnie.com staff writer
November 4, 2010
|
Low-dose
CT screening for lung cancer cuts lung
cancer deaths by more than 20%, the U.S.
National Cancer Institute (NCI) said
today in its release of early results
from the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST).
The
trial, launched eight years ago,
followed more than 53,000 current and
former smokers who were randomized to
either x-ray or low-dose CT lung
screening. The early results represent a
clear confirmation of screening's
benefits, after more than a decade of
screening trials have strongly suggested
but failed to prove in a randomized
fashion a mortality benefit resulting
from the screening of at-risk
populations.
"This
is the first time that we have seen
clear evidence of a significant
reduction in lung cancer mortality with
a screening test in a randomized,
controlled trial," said Christine
Berg, MD, project officer for the lung
screening study at NCI, in a statement
providing the early results. "The
fact that low-dose helical CT provides a
decided benefit is a result that will
have implications for the screening and
management of lung cancer for many years
to come."
"Now
we have validation from the NCI that
screening people at high risk for lung
cancer with CT scans can significantly
reduce mortality in lung cancer, which
is causing more deaths each year than
breast, prostate, colon, and pancreatic
cancers combined,” said Laurie
Fenton-Ambrose from the advocacy group
Lung Cancer Alliance.
The NCI
decided to release the findings after
the trial's data and safety monitoring
board notified the NCI director that the
data "now provide a statistically
convincing answer to the study's primary
question and that the trial should
therefore be stopped," according to
the statement. Complete results and
analysis will be compiled and published
in a peer-reviewed journal within the
next several months.
Beginning
in 2002, the NLST enrolled 53,500 men
and women at 33 trial sites throughout
the U.S. To enroll, smokers and former
smokers needed to have a smoking history
of at least 30 pack-years and be without
signs or symptoms of lung cancer. They
were randomly assigned to undergo
standard chest x-ray or low-dose helical
CT.
The
x-ray arm of the study was controversial
from the start, inasmuch as the modality
had already been shown to be relatively
insensitive for detecting early lung
cancers amenable to curative resection.
Participants
were screened at the end of their first
and second years in the trial, then
followed for five years, during which
all deaths were documented. As of
October 20, 2010, 354 participants had
died in the CT arm of the study,
compared with 442 in the chest x-ray
group.
The CT
acquisition parameters were not
explicitly defined; however, each
scanner was tested individually with a
phantom to ensure that diagnostic images
could be produced at 40 mAs for the
average-sized patient, according to an
article describing the study design that
was published online November 2, 2010,
in Radiology.
Depending
on the MDCT scanner model, the effective
tube current-time product ranged from 20
to 30 mAs for an average-sized patient,
the report stated, and the effective
radiation dose was estimated at 1.5 mSv
for the average-sized patient.
Following
analysis of the data, the study's
independent data safety and monitoring
board concluded that the 20.3% reduction
in lung cancer mortality "met the
standard for statistical significance
and recommended ending the study,"
according to the statement.
"This
large and well-designed study used
rigorous scientific methods to test ways
to prevent death from lung cancer by
screening patients at especially high
risk," said NCI director Harold
Varmus, MD, in a statement accompanying
the results. "Lung cancer is the
leading cause of cancer mortality in the
U.S. and throughout the world, so a
validated approach that can reduce lung
cancer mortality by even 20% has the
potential to spare very significant
numbers of people from the ravages of
this disease."
The
researchers also found that all-cause
mortality dropped by 7% in those
screened with low-dose helical CT versus
those randomized to chest x-ray. Lung
cancer deaths constituted about 25% of
all deaths in the trial, with others
attributed to factors such as
cardiovascular disease. Further analysis
will be needed to understand these
findings more fully, the NCI said.
Secondary
end points of the trial that remain to
be described fully include lung cancer
stage at diagnosis, lung cancer
survival, and adverse effects of
diagnostic evaluation, according to the
November 2 Radiology article.
Data on quality of life and
cost-effectiveness were also collected
and will eventually allow the research
team to answer the full range of
questions about screening's effects.
The NCI
statement also cited the "highly
motivated and primarily urban"
study cohort, and the use of major
academic centers for screening as
limitations of the study, as the U.S.
population of smokers as a whole could
be less motivated and have access to
less comprehensive care. Radiation
concerns from CT scanning will also need
to be taken into account, according to
the NCI; however, the robust mortality
reduction appears to be a more important
factor than radiation by orders of
magnitude.
In
another statement, James Mulshine, MD,
associate provost and vice president for
research at Rush University Medical
Center in Chicago, said: "With this
positive trial result, we have the
opportunity to realize the greatest
single reduction of cancer mortality in
the history of the war on cancer."
"This
is good news," Bruce Johnson of
Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute,
which wasn't involved in the study, told
USA Today. "The reduction in
deaths is comparable to mammograms,
which reduce deaths by 14% to 15%."
The
results show the benefits of low-dose
helical CT screening in an older,
high-risk population, and suggest that
if low-dose helical CT screening is
implemented responsibly with careful
follow-up, thousands of lives can be
saved, said Denise Aberle, MD, NLST
national principal investigator for
ACRIN. "However, she added,
"given the high association between
lung cancer and cigarette smoking, the
trial investigators re-emphasize that
the single best way to prevent lung
cancer deaths is to never start smoking,
and if already smoking, to quit
permanently."
By Eric
Barnes
AuntMinnie.com staff writer
November 4, 2010
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