CT scans for lung cancer are expensive
-- but of little value
Computed tomography
(CT) scans widely marketed to consumers may not be valuable for mass
screening of lung cancer, a Johns Hopkins study has found.
Results of the
study, published in the Jan. 15 issue of The Journal of the
American Medical Association, show that the number of lives saved
by annual whole body CT screening may be outweighed by its costs and
the harm of unnecessary testing for lung nodules identified that turn
out to be benign. Screening was increasingly less cost-effective for
those who quit smoking at the time of the first screening and for
former smokers.
"Direct-to-consumer
marketing and media coverage of CT trials has encouraged demand for
lung cancer screening despite a lack of evidence for its efficacy,"
said lead author Parthiv J. Mahadevia, M.D., M.P.H., a research
scientist at MEDTAP International in
Bethesda
,
Md.
, who was a Robert
Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar at Johns Hopkins when the study was
completed.
"These scans are not
risk-free," he stressed. "There is a downside to this, including high
costs and possible harm to individuals who may unnecessarily get
invasive procedures if the scan detects a benign lung nodule."
An estimated 50
million men and women in the
United
States
smoked between the
ages of 45 and 75, the authors noted. If just half of this group
received periodic annual screening, the program costs would be
approximately $115 billion.
The National Cancer
Institute has begun an eight-year trial comparing CT scans to chest
X-rays in the diagnosis of lung cancer. But until there's solid data,
consumers may want to hold off on the screenings, said senior author
Neil R. Powe, M.D., MPH, Johns Hopkins professor of medicine and
epidemiology and director of Johns Hopkins' Welch Center for
Prevention, Epidemiology and Clinical Research. Smoking cessation is
the only proven, cost-effective method to reduce lung cancer risk, he
pointed out.
"We're not down on
the technology, just its injudicious use," said Powe. "CT can be a
very useful tool, but only when recommended by a physician for a
specific clinical purpose."
He added, "Getting a
scan does not mean doctors will detect cancer and save your life.
Doctors need to help patients think about their own personal risk for
lung cancer, and whether this is worth it."
Researchers studied
data from published lung cancer studies and from the Surveillance,
Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) national cancer database, then
used this information to develop a computer program comparing annual
CT screening to no screening in hypothetical groups of 100,000
60-year-old current smokers; in smokers who were in the process of
quitting at the time of the first screening; and in smokers who had
quit five or more years prior to screening. The investigators measured
benefits by comparing the difference in lung cancer deaths, and harm
by the number of false-positive invasive tests or surgeries.
Over a 20-year
period, there were 462,352 screening exams for current smokers.
Researchers estimated 4,168 lung cancer deaths per 100,000 people who
did not get screened, compared to 3,615 lung cancer deaths among those
who were screened, yielding a reduction in mortality of 553 deaths or
13%. However, there also were 1,186 invasive tests or surgeries for
benign lesions in the screened group.
A cost-effectiveness
analysis found that to save one year of "high-quality" life (called a
"quality-adjusted life-year") would cost $116,300. Annual screening
became progressively less cost-effective the longer former smokers had
been smoke-free. The screening cost among those who quit at the start
of screening was $558,600 per quality-adjusted life-year, and for
former smokers, $2.3 million per quality-adjusted life-year. Many
other screening tests currently reimbursed by insurers and recommended
by physician groups have cost-effectiveness ratios of less than
$100,000 per quality-adjusted life-year.
The study also found
that:
*** Screening was
most cost-effective when started between ages 55 and 65.
*** During the first
two years of screening, there was a loss in cost effectiveness because
of the harms and costs associated with unnecessary testing and
treatment of benign masses. Gains in cost effectiveness did not appear
until the third year of follow-up.
SOURCE:
"Lung Cancer Screening with Helical Computed Tomography in Older Adult
Smokers -- A Decision and Cost-Effectiveness Analysis," The Journal
of the American Medical Association,
Jan. 15, 2003
.
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