Low-dose CT Scans and Lung Cancer Screening in the Occupational Setting

Posted on by Simone Tramma, MD, MS; Eileen Storey, MD, MPH; Douglas B. Trout, MD, MHS; Marie Haring Sweeney, PhD, MPH

 

In early 2011 NIOSH posted a blog entry commenting on the preliminary results from the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST), funded by the National Cancer Institute, that found a 20.3% reduction in deaths from lung cancer among current or former heavy smokers who were screened with low-dose helical computed tomography (CT) versus those screened by chest X-ray (CXR). On June 29, 2011, the peer-reviewed primary results from the NLST were published online in the New England Journal of Medicine. This is an update to the previous blog.1

The National Lung Screening Trial

The National Lung Screening Trial (NLST)2 was a national randomized controlled trial launched by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in 2002 to determine whether annual screening with low-dose helical CT would lead to earlier detection and reduced mortality from lung cancer relative to screening with CXR.

In this trial 53,454 participants at high risk for lung cancer—current and former heavy smokers of at least 30 pack-years between 55 and 74 years of age—were randomly assigned to receive low-dose helical CT or chest x-ray screenings once a year for three years, and then followed for 3.5 additional years with no further screening.

Participant compliance with screening was over 90%. During the screening phase of the trial, 39.1% of the participants in the low-dose helical CT group and 16% of the participants in the chest X-ray group had at least one positive screening result, i.e., a finding suggestive of lung cancer. Of the total number of screening tests in the three rounds, 24.2% of the low-dose CT tests and 6.9% of the X-ray tests were classified as positive. Upon follow-up, 96.4% of the “positive” low-dose CT tests and 94.5% of the “positive” X-ray tests turned out to be false positives, meaning that the positive finding did not prove to be lung cancer. Lung cancer was confirmed in 3.6% of the positive screenings in the low-dose CT group and in 5.5% of the positive screenings in the X-ray group.

The diagnostic evaluations mainly consisted of further imaging: diagnostic CT, PET-CT scans and chest radiography. Invasive procedures were performed far less frequently. The rate of at least one complication after a diagnostic evaluation for a positive screening test was less than 2% for either type of screening. Among those who did have complications, 16 participants screened with low-dose helical CT (10 of whom had lung cancer) and 10 X-ray participants (all with lung cancer) died within 60 days of a follow-up invasive diagnostic procedure. It is not known whether the complications from the diagnostic procedures caused these deaths.

Lung cancer incidence per 100,000 person-years was 645 (1,060 cancers) in the low-dose helical CT group and 572 (941 cancers) in the chest X-ray group. In the low-dose CT group, 649 cancers were diagnosed after a positive screening test, 44 after a negative screening test, and 367 among participants who either missed the screening or received the diagnosis after their trial screening phase was over. In the X-ray group, 279 cancers were diagnosed after a positive screening test, 137 after a negative screening test, and 525 among participants who either missed the screening or received the diagnosis after their trial screening phase was over. In both groups, the highest percentages of screen-detected lung cancers were in early stage, and adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma were the types of lung cancer most detected by screening. Small-cell lung cancers were not detected in early stages by either screening method.

Lung cancer mortality was 247 per 100,000 person-years in the low-dose helical CT group and 309 in the chest X-ray group, representing a reduction in lung cancer mortality in the low-dose helical CT group of 20.3%. All-cause mortality (deaths due to any cause, including lung cancer) was reduced by 6.7% for those participants who underwent low-dose helical CTs compared to those who received chest X-rays.

Key Points to Consider

Lung cancer mortality is high and better survival prognosis for early stage cases makes early detection an appealing public health strategy. For years studies have been conducted to find an effective screening method; the NLST is the first randomized trial to show a significant reduction in mortality from lung cancer with low-dose CT screening. Until this trial, no screening test has been shown to reduce the risk from dying from lung cancer. However, it is important to emphasize that the data derived from the NLST were obtained from a very specific population group—individuals at high risk for developing lung cancer due to present or past heavy smoking, aged 55 to 74, and do not necessarily apply to the general population or specific populations of workers. In addition, the participants were mostly screened at major academic medical centers, staffed by experienced, well-trained radiologists and thoracic oncologists. It is unclear if results could be reproduced at different settings.

Screening with CT scans is not risk-free. Radiation exposure from repeated CT scans is cumulative and can lead to illness, including cancer. While a “low-dose” method was used, this is relative to a full diagnostic helical CT scan (average radiation effective dose 7 mSv).3 The radiation dose for this “low-dose” method (1.5 mSv in the NLST) is about 15 times higher than a CXR (average effective dose 0.1 mSv).3 Because the harmful effect of radiation is a long-term phenomenon, any harm from exposure to radiation during the screenings could not be measured directly in NLST.

Any screening process generates suspicious findings that turn out not to be cancer in a large number of cases, producing significant anxiety, morbidity and expense. People who receive false-positive results may be subjected to unnecessary testing, including more radiation exposure, invasive diagnostic and surgical procedures; complications, and even death. In the NLST, 39.1% of those participating in low-dose CT screening had at least one positive result and 96.4% of these were false-positives and did not identify a lung cancer.

Overdiagnosis is another major concern when screening for cancer. This is because the screening process may be more likely to detect slow growing cancers or cancers that would not have become symptomatic and therefore never diagnosed. The implication for overdiagnosis is that the patients diagnosed with an indolent cancer may end up undergoing an invasive intervention that they would not otherwise need. Additional follow-up would be necessary to measure the extent and magnitude of overdiagnosis in the NLST.

Analyses on the cost-effectiveness and quality-of-life effects from the NLST are still to be released; however, the authors pointed out that 320 individuals had to be screened with CT to prevent one lung cancer death. According to the NLST researchers, cost-effectiveness analyses of low-dose CT screening including not only the screening examination itself but also the diagnostic follow-up and treatment must be rigorously analyzed before policy recommendations can be made. They advise policy makers to wait for more information before endorsing lung-cancer screening programs.

In the occupational setting, there are a number of agents associated with lung cancer. However, the excess risks for lung cancer associated with these occupational exposures vary depending on the actual exposures. Consideration of the use of any screening test in occupationally exposed groups requires a careful assessment of the risk of a given condition. The risk of lung cancer from a specific exposure will directly affect the likelihood that a positive screening test for lung cancer will actually be evidence that the cancer exists. In other words, high risk for lung cancer in the NSLT trial due to a long history of heavy smoking made it more likely that a “positive” finding on a low-dose CT scan was in fact a lung cancer. The benefit of screening for lung cancer with low-dose CT cannot be easily estimated for populations with risk profiles that are different from those of the NLST participants. For that matter, the NLST researchers are planning collaborations with the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network4 to investigate the potential effect of low-dose CT screening in a wide range of scenarios. Further studies using the NLST data for identification of biologic markers for lung cancer are likely to be forthcoming; such studies may help in decision-making concerning which groups may benefit from screening with low-dose helical CT, and assist in establishing recommendations in the occupational setting.

NIOSH will continue to consult with the NCI investigators, and work with stakeholders in labor, industry, and the occupational medicine clinical community to consider how these data related to cancer screening may impact workers potentially at risk for lung cancer because of occupational exposures. As noted by Dr. Harold Sox in an editorial accompanying the NLST report, its findings can be considered a landmark in the lung cancer screening research era. Now, the “focus will shift to informing the difficult patient-centered and policy decisions that are yet to come.”5

Dr. Tramma is a Senior Service Fellow/Medical Officer in the Surveillance Branch of the NIOSH Division of Respiratory Disease Studies.

Dr. Storey is Chief of the Surveillance Branch in the NIOSH Division of Respiratory Disease Studies.

Dr. Trout is Associate Director for Science in the NIOSH Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies.

Dr. Sweeney is Chief of the Surveillance Branch in the NIOSH Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies.

References

  1. NIOSH Science Blog. Helical CT Scans and Lung Cancer Screening.
  2. National Lung Screening Trial Research Team. Reduced Lung-Cancer Mortality with Low-Dose Computed Tomographic Screening. N Engl J Med. 2011 Jun 29. [Epub ahead of print]
  3. Mettler FA Jr, Huda W, Yoshizumi TT, Mahesh M. Effective doses in radiology and diagnostic nuclear medicine: A catalog. Radiology 248(1):254-263; 2008.
  4. Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET).
  5. Sox HC. Better evidence about screening for lung cancer. Editorial. N Engl J Med. 2011 Jun 29. [Epub ahead of print]
Posted on by Simone Tramma, MD, MS; Eileen Storey, MD, MPH; Douglas B. Trout, MD, MHS; Marie Haring Sweeney, PhD, MPH

11 comments on “Low-dose CT Scans and Lung Cancer Screening in the Occupational Setting”

Comments listed below are posted by individuals not associated with CDC, unless otherwise stated. These comments do not represent the official views of CDC, and CDC does not guarantee that any information posted by individuals on this site is correct, and disclaims any liability for any loss or damage resulting from reliance on any such information. Read more about our comment policy ».

    To my knowledge, CISNET does not take into account occupational exposures in modeling. It would be very useful if NIOSH could host a working group to develop a way to address occupational risk. Given that the combination of occupational exposure and smoking appears synergistic for some exposures, and is definitely more than nonaddictive, a good model is essential to identify working populations at high risk for lung cancer.

    Simply put, the NLST results demonstrating the efficacy of low dose CT scanning in reducing lung cancer mortality is the first time that any type of cancer that frequently occurs as a result of occupational exposures has been shown through an RCT to be amenable to screening. Given that NIOSH estimated that there were 10,000-27,000 occupational lung cancer deaths in the U.S. in 1997 (Steenland et al AJIM 2003), this new finding deserves urgent attention from the OM community.

    As to the “key points” raised above, NLST showed that overdiagnosis was NOT a sizable problem. This is an important finding, since it differentiates lung cancer and its screening from some other common cancers.

    Second, the problem of “false positives” is unduly emphasized. Most “positive” chest CT scans have indeterminate lung nodules, which are not regarded as suspicious for lung cancer and are easily followed by a repeat low dose CT scan. Note in the the NLST trial that the majority of follow-up “diagnostic” evaluations of positive CT scans consisted of a repeat CT scan or chest x-ray. The I-ELCAP protocol recommends such a follow up of positive chest CT scans.

    Third, estimates of low dose CT radiation-related risk have been made and should be included in the discussion. They are real but low (Brenner, Radiology 2004), much lower than the magnitude of the benefit demonstrated by the NLST.

    Let’s proceed with caution, but let’s proceed. Lung cancer kills many workers.

    Disclosure: Dr. Markowitz is funded by the Department of Energy to conduct low dose chest CT scanning of nuclear weapons workers. He has provided medico-legal expertise on this topic in 2 lawsuits.

    New study shows a 15% rate of pneumothorax in folks getting lung nodules biopsied … 6% requiring a chest tube.

    Multiply times the 95% false positive rate of 25,000 scans (or 50,000,000 if it’s rolled out?) Number needed to screen of 320 in a high-high-risk population, which number will go way higher when lower-risk people are screened as would seem likely.

    Not recommending my ex-heavy smoking family member get a chest CT. At least not till things are more clear. Would you?

    Source:
    [http://www.pulmccm.org/main/category/lung-cancer-review/]

    Congratulations to the NCI for taking on such a vital RCT with implications for occupational, as well as public health. As our colleagues at NIOSH suggest, the exposure of participants in the NLST to “present or past heavy smoking” is a critical consideration in formulating methodologies for the screening of asymptomatic individuals with indirectly related and unreliably estimated occupational exposures. This is true, for example, for truck drivers exposed to diesel exhaust and other mobile source related particulate matter (PM)(ie, the population characterized by Steenland et al AJIM 2003) who according to an analysis of 57,852 truck drivers by Harvard-affiliated researchers (ie, Jain et al AJIM 2006) self-report an age-adjusted prevalence of ever smoking of 67% with some national studies identifying subpopulations self-reporting current smoking as high as 40%. Only a reliable exposure assessment can enable the risk communication required when providing an individual employee (ie, not an entire occupational classification) with information regarding the benefits and risks of a medical screening test with potential to lead to loss of life (eg, 6/16 or over a third of those participants in the NLST who died within 60 days of an invasive diagnostic procedure following this protocol did not, in fact, have lung cancer).

    Fortunately, NIOSH (with the explicit support ACOEM as of August 4, 2011) is simultaneously working to promote the expansion of national standards for electronic health records (as set forth by the DHHS Office of the National Coordinator) to include documentation of occupational exposures in a way which will ensure that the use of CT and other screening modalities (eg, numerous biomarkers) will so judicious as to replicate the relatively favorable findings of the NLST, while preventing unnecessary adverse outcomes for those workers not at significant risk, but instead “worried well.” It will remain for employers to systematically populate these records with exposure assessment data which enables risk-informed decision-making on the parts of occupational physicians and employees with respect to the various carcinogens present in U.S. workplaces.

    Lastly, it must be noted that the clinical results of the NLST do not necessarily reflect the benefits and risks to be anticipated in other populations potentially screened and treated for lung cancer where the acceptance of surgical intervention by participants may not be so favorable. An astounding 92.5% of NLST participants screened with CT and 87.5% screened with X-ray who were found to have stage IA or IB cancer accepted surgical intervention. By contrast, surgical resection of stage IA and IB cancers, “the only reliable treatment for cure,” appears to occur in as few as 66% of white patients and 55% of black patients (Cykert et al JAMA 2010), reflecting a tragic racial disparity demonstrated in similar studies and potentially less favorable survival rates than experienced by the NLST cohort. Clearly, the decision to undertake lung cancer screening in the occupational setting must be closely linked with the effective communication of treatment options and ultimately the efficient delivery of medical services through workers’ compensation programs in order to ensure that those identified as having curable lung cancer go on to benefit from the screening which they and numerous employees not affected by cancer have undertaken at considerable risk.

    Dr. Michael Ardaiz is the Chief Medical Officer for the U.S. Department of Energy.

    I think the authors said it best when they pointed out that “320 individuals had to be screened with CT to prevent one lung cancer death.” and this in a highly controlled population of very heavy 30 pack-years smokers between 55 and 74. That begs the question about findings in the population at large.

    Further according to the NLST researchers themselves stated, cost-effectiveness analyses of low-dose CT screening including not only the screening examination itself but also the diagnostic follow-up and treatment must be rigorously analyzed before policy recommendations can be made. They advise policy makers to wait for more information before endorsing lung-cancer screening programs.” I could not agree more.

    We are a Huntsville AL Chiropractor and as such we obviously refer out cases other then musculoskeletal disorders. However our patients are also subjected to all test so we do have a dog in the fight.

    As further noted by Dr. Harold Sox in his editorial comment accompanying the NLST report, “its findings can be considered a landmark in the lung cancer screening research era. Now, the “focus will shift to informing the difficult patient-centered and policy decisions that are yet to come.”

    I am a cancer survivor myself. I am not opposed to idea of using low-dose CT screening process; but, I think that is well said in other words “this study is too new to rate.” Let’s do some more research.

    Smoking is mortally dangerous habit which leads to lung cancer. Therefore use of promptly developing digital technologies for the prevention of this disease is an important step to fight against a cancer.

    Screening process is done to find out abnormality, and it leads to Anxiety. But a lot cancers can be detected early in the starting stage. Observe your body from the starting stage and if there is any change in your body don’t wait until up to screening process. Smoking is the main reason for lung cancer, stop smoking and fight with the cancer.

    Thanks for your useful post. Over time, I have come to be able to understand that the particular symptoms of mesothelioma cancer are caused by a build up of fluid between the lining in the lung and the breasts cavity. The sickness may start from the chest region and distribute to other parts of the body. Other symptoms of pleural mesothelioma include fat loss, severe inhaling trouble, nausea, difficulty taking in food, and puffiness of the face and neck areas. It should be noted that some people with the disease do not experience any serious signs and symptoms at all.

    It would be nice if the medical insurance companies can add annual tests for their clients. This will help people to have an early detection of cancer or any other diseases. Though there are some giving annual check up, but it seems like it is not able to determine or diagnose dreadful diseases. It may not be annually or let’s say every 3-5 years,then alternate it yearly with other major test.

    Though CT scans do have risks but if greater disease can be prevented, then why not? Hope they would make another study on the survival rate of early detection using CT at least our future can use it as their basis.

    Professor Prem raj Pushpakaran writes — 2019 marks the birth centenary year of Godfrey N. Hounsfield, who pioneered the CT scanner!!!

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