Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?

Background: The National Lung Screening Trial demonstrated that screening for lung cancer improved overall survival (OS) and reduced lung cancer mortality in the 55-74-year-old age group by increasing the proportion of cancers detected at an early stage. Because of the increasing life expectancy of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: John eVarlotto, Malcolm M. DeCamp, John eFlickinger, Jessica eLake, Abram eRecht, Chandra eBelani, Michael eReed, Jennifer eToth, Heath eMackley, Christopher eSciamanna, Alan eLipton, Suhail eAli, Richkesvar eMahraj, Christopher eGilbert, Nengliang eYao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2014.00037/full
id doaj-4c1ac80564c1485fb2b609a3de9395f5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4c1ac80564c1485fb2b609a3de9395f52020-11-24T21:03:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Oncology2234-943X2014-03-01410.3389/fonc.2014.0003780300Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?John eVarlotto0Malcolm M. DeCamp1John eFlickinger2Jessica eLake3Abram eRecht4Chandra eBelani5Michael eReed6Jennifer eToth7Heath eMackley8Christopher eSciamanna9Alan eLipton10Suhail eAli11Richkesvar eMahraj12Christopher eGilbert13Nengliang eYao14University of Massachusetts Medical CenterNorthwestern Memorial HospitalUniversity of PittsburghMedical College of WisconsinBeth Israel Deaconess Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterPenn State Hershey Medical CenterVirginia Commonwealth UniversityBackground: The National Lung Screening Trial demonstrated that screening for lung cancer improved overall survival (OS) and reduced lung cancer mortality in the 55-74-year-old age group by increasing the proportion of cancers detected at an early stage. Because of the increasing life expectancy of the American population, we investigated whether screening for lung cancer might benefit men and women aged 75-84 years. <br/> <br/>Materials/Methods: Rates of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) from 2000-2009 were calculated in both these younger and older age groups using the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Reporting (SEER) database. OS and lung cancer -specific survival (LCSS) in patients with Stage I NSCLC diagnosed from 2004-2009 were analyzed to determine the effects of age and treatment. <br/> <br/>Results: The per capita incidence of NSCLC decreased in the 55-74 cohort, but increased in the 75-84 cohort over the study period. Crude lung cancer death rates in the two age groups who had no specific treatment were 39.5% and 44.9%, respectively. These rates fell in both age groups when increasingly aggressive treatment was used. Rates of OS and LCSS improved significantly with increasingly aggressive treatment in the 75-84 age group. The survival benefits of increasingly aggressive treatment in 75-84 year old females did not differ from their counterparts in the younger cohort. <br/> <br/>Conclusions: Screening for lung cancer might be of benefit to individuals at increased risk of lung cancer in the age 75-84 group. The survival benefits of aggressive therapy are similar in females between 55-74 and 75-84 years old. <br/>http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2014.00037/fullRadiotherapyThoracic Surgeryscreeninglung cancerElderly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John eVarlotto
Malcolm M. DeCamp
John eFlickinger
Jessica eLake
Abram eRecht
Chandra eBelani
Michael eReed
Jennifer eToth
Heath eMackley
Christopher eSciamanna
Alan eLipton
Suhail eAli
Richkesvar eMahraj
Christopher eGilbert
Nengliang eYao
spellingShingle John eVarlotto
Malcolm M. DeCamp
John eFlickinger
Jessica eLake
Abram eRecht
Chandra eBelani
Michael eReed
Jennifer eToth
Heath eMackley
Christopher eSciamanna
Alan eLipton
Suhail eAli
Richkesvar eMahraj
Christopher eGilbert
Nengliang eYao
Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
Frontiers in Oncology
Radiotherapy
Thoracic Surgery
screening
lung cancer
Elderly
author_facet John eVarlotto
Malcolm M. DeCamp
John eFlickinger
Jessica eLake
Abram eRecht
Chandra eBelani
Michael eReed
Jennifer eToth
Heath eMackley
Christopher eSciamanna
Alan eLipton
Suhail eAli
Richkesvar eMahraj
Christopher eGilbert
Nengliang eYao
author_sort John eVarlotto
title Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
title_short Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
title_full Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
title_fullStr Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
title_full_unstemmed Would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the United States?
title_sort would screening for lung cancer benefit 75- to 84-year-old residents of the united states?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Oncology
issn 2234-943X
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Background: The National Lung Screening Trial demonstrated that screening for lung cancer improved overall survival (OS) and reduced lung cancer mortality in the 55-74-year-old age group by increasing the proportion of cancers detected at an early stage. Because of the increasing life expectancy of the American population, we investigated whether screening for lung cancer might benefit men and women aged 75-84 years. <br/> <br/>Materials/Methods: Rates of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) from 2000-2009 were calculated in both these younger and older age groups using the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Reporting (SEER) database. OS and lung cancer -specific survival (LCSS) in patients with Stage I NSCLC diagnosed from 2004-2009 were analyzed to determine the effects of age and treatment. <br/> <br/>Results: The per capita incidence of NSCLC decreased in the 55-74 cohort, but increased in the 75-84 cohort over the study period. Crude lung cancer death rates in the two age groups who had no specific treatment were 39.5% and 44.9%, respectively. These rates fell in both age groups when increasingly aggressive treatment was used. Rates of OS and LCSS improved significantly with increasingly aggressive treatment in the 75-84 age group. The survival benefits of increasingly aggressive treatment in 75-84 year old females did not differ from their counterparts in the younger cohort. <br/> <br/>Conclusions: Screening for lung cancer might be of benefit to individuals at increased risk of lung cancer in the age 75-84 group. The survival benefits of aggressive therapy are similar in females between 55-74 and 75-84 years old. <br/>
topic Radiotherapy
Thoracic Surgery
screening
lung cancer
Elderly
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2014.00037/full
work_keys_str_mv AT johnevarlotto wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT malcolmmdecamp wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT johneflickinger wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT jessicaelake wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT abramerecht wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT chandraebelani wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT michaelereed wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT jenniferetoth wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT heathemackley wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT christopheresciamanna wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT alanelipton wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT suhaileali wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT richkesvaremahraj wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT christopheregilbert wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
AT nengliangeyao wouldscreeningforlungcancerbenefit75to84yearoldresidentsoftheunitedstates
_version_ 1716774240692207616