Abstract

BackgroundDespite much research published on lung cancer screening, China has had no large-scale study on the missed diagnosis of lung cancer in a health examination population. We therefore did a real-world study using the current lung cancer screening guidelines to a health examination population in China to determine the proportion of lung cancer cases that have been missed.MethodsA real-world cohort study of screening, with the use of low-dose computed tomography, was conducted among people who took yearly health checkup in health management center of West China Hospital between 2006 and 2017. We respectively used current guidelines including lung cancer screening guidelines of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) and expert consensus on low dose spiral CT lung cancer screening in China.ResultsIn a total of 15,996 participants with health examination who completed the baseline screening, 6779 (42.4%) subjects had at least one positive finding, and 142 (2.1%) cases of lung cancer were screened positive. The false positive rate was 97.9%. Of 142 lung cancer cases detected in our study, only 9.2% met the lung cancer screening guidelines proposed by the USPSTF, and 24.4% met that of China. The rates of missed diagnosis were as high as 90.8 and 75.6% respectively. In addition, we did an in-depth analysis by gender. We found that among male patients with lung cancer, the proportion of smokers was 75%, and the proportion of young people under 50 was 23.2%. Among female patients with lung cancer, the proportion of smokers was only 5.8%, and the proportion of young people under 50 was up to 33.3%.ConclusionsThe rate of missed diagnosis was as high as 90.8% applying the current lung cancer screening guidelines to the health examination population in China. Further study to determine screening guidelines for targeted populations, is warranted.

Highlights

  • Despite much research published on lung cancer screening, China has had no large-scale study on the missed diagnosis of lung cancer in a health examination population

  • A total of 142 cases of lung cancer were screened out from the health examination population initially recruited in this research, the detection rate of lung cancer was 2.1%, and the false positive rate was 97.9% (Table 2)

  • The analysis showed that based on the guidelines of the lung cancer screening proposed by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) [5, 6], of the 142 cases of lung cancer, 72 patients were aged 55–80, and 70 patients did not meet the age-standard (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Despite much research published on lung cancer screening, China has had no large-scale study on the missed diagnosis of lung cancer in a health examination population. We did a real-world study using the current lung cancer screening guidelines to a health examination population in China to determine the proportion of lung cancer cases that have been missed. Many authoritative medical organizations have launched screening guidelines, which recommended lung cancer screening in high-risk groups with LDCT [5,6,7]. Researches showed that except for smoking, the causes of lung cancer were attributed to air pollution, environmental exposure, genetic factors [8, 9]. If lung cancer in never smoker was considered as a separate category, it would be the seventh most common cause of cancer death around the world [10]. Young patients with lung cancer have gradually become a disease group that can not be ignored [11,12,13]

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