Early Lung Cancer Action Project: overall design and findings from baseline screening

The Early Lung Cancer Action Project (ELCAP) is designed to evaluate baseline and annual repeat screening by low-radiation-dose computed tomography (low-dose CT) in people at high risk of lung cancer. We report the baseline experience. ELCAP has enrolled 1000 symptom-free volunteers, aged 60 years o...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 1999-07, Vol.354 (9173), p.99-105
Hauptverfasser: Henschke, Claudia I, McCauley, Dorothy I, Yankelevitz, David F, Naidich, David P, McGuinness, Georgeann, Miettinen, Olli S, Libby, Daniel M, Pasmantier, Mark W, Koizumi, June, Altorki, Nasser K, Smith, James P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The Early Lung Cancer Action Project (ELCAP) is designed to evaluate baseline and annual repeat screening by low-radiation-dose computed tomography (low-dose CT) in people at high risk of lung cancer. We report the baseline experience. ELCAP has enrolled 1000 symptom-free volunteers, aged 60 years or older, with at least 10 pack-years of cigarette smoking and no previous cancer, who were medically fit to undergo thoracic surgery. After a structured interview and informed consent, chest radiographs and low-dose CT were done for each participant. The diagnostic investigation of screen-detected non-calcified pulmonary nodules was guided by ELCAP recommendations, which included short-term high-resolution CT follow-up for the smallest non-calcified nodules. Non-calcified nodules were detected in 233 (23% [95% CI 21-26]) participants by low-dose CT at baseline, compared with 68 (7% [5-9]) by chest radiography. Malignant disease was detected in 27 (2·7% [1·8–3·8]) by CT and seven (0·7% [0·3–1·3]) by chest radiography, and stage I malignant disease in 23 (2·3% [1·5–3·3]) and four (0·4% [0·1–0·9]), respectively. Of the 27 CT-detected cancers, 26 were resectable. Biopsies were done on 28 of the 233 participants with non-calcified nodules; 27 had malignant non-calcified nodules and one had a benign nodule. Another three individuals underwent biopsy against the ELCAP recommendations; all had benign non-calcified nodules. No participant had thoracotomy for a benign nodule. Low-dose CT can greatly improve the likelihood of detection of small non-calcified nodules, and thus of lung cancer at an earlier and potentially more curable stage. Although false-positive CT results are common, they can be managed with little use of invasive diagnostic procedures.
ISSN:0140-6736
1474-547X
DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(99)06093-6