Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Health panel may open lung cancer screening to more smokers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2020 07:12 PM
  • Health panel may open lung cancer screening to more smokers

A U.S. health panel wants to widen the number of Americans offered yearly scans for lung cancer by opening the screening to less-heavy smokers.

Lung cancer is the nation's top cancer killer, causing more than 135,000 deaths each year. Smoking is the chief cause and quitting the best protection.

Usually, lung cancer is diagnosed too late for a good chance at survival. But research shows that annual low-dose CT scans, a type of X-ray, can reduce the risk of death when offered to certain people.

In 2013, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force said current or former smokers who’d gone through a pack of cigarettes a day for 30 years, or an equivalent amount, qualified for the screening starting at age 55.

Now in draft recommendations released Tuesday, the task force said it’s time to expand screening to those who’ve smoked less -- 20 pack-years -- and to start a little sooner, at age 50. The proposed change comes after a newer study found those people are about as likely to benefit as the heavier, older smokers.

If finalized, the new recommendations would make about 15 million Americans eligible for screening, nearly double today’s number, said task force member Dr. Michael Barry of Massachusetts General Hospital.

Importantly, more women and African Americans would qualify, he said.

Lung cancer screening is complicated -- not every hospital is equipped to offer it -- and few of those eligible today receive it, just 6% according to one study the task force cited. In contrast, 60% to 80% of those eligible for breast, colon or cervical cancer screening get checked.

One reason: When lung cancer screening finds an abnormality, people may need invasive testing to tell if it’s really a tumour -- and occasionally those lung biopsies can cause serious, even fatal, complications, said Dr. Otis Brawley of Johns Hopkins University, a cancer expert not involved with the task force.

Still, Brawley welcomed the expanded eligibility because lighter, younger smokers should have lungs in good enough shape to get the benefit of screening without as much risk.

“You’re recruiting healthier smokers, people who you’re more likely to be able to surgically intervene and do something,” he said. “They are moving toward a population where the bad things are less likely to happen.”

The proposal is open for public comment through August 3. If finalized, the screening would be available to the qualified younger, lighter smokers without a co-pay, just as it is today for people who meet the criteria.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis
World-renowned HIV experts from British Columbia are stepping in to help control a massive outbreak of the disease in rural Indiana.

Indiana University And B.C. Experts Team Up To Control Rural HIV Crisis

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them
Even though fewer U.S. teens are smoking, secondhand smoke remains a big problem for them, a government study found.

Even Though Fewer Us Teens Are Smoking, Secondhand Smoke Remains A Big Problem For Them

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries
The pediatric surgeons hover over a tiny heart, gently retracting delicate inner structures and attaching a graft with impossibly intricate stitches to repair a congenital defect that would mean certain death within days of birth.

3D-Printed Hearts Help Doctors Safely Train To Perform Delicate Cardiac Surgeries

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls
Nearly every girl and woman on Earth carries two X chromosomes in each of her cells -- but one of them does (mostly) nothing. Do you know why?

Decoded: What 'Silences' X Chromosome In Girls

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia
A scientific paper released on January 6, provides the first published evidence that a European variant of infectious salmon anaemia virus (ISAV) is present in British Columbia, Canada. 

Feared Atlantic Farm Salmon Virus Identified In British Columbia

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk
British health officials say drinking any alcohol regularly increases the risk of cancer, and have issued tough new guidelines that could be hard to swallow in a nation where having a pint is a hallowed tradition.

Put Down That Drink: New UK Guidelines Say Drinking Any Alcohol Regularly Boosts Cancer Risk