Screening for lung cancer
220 results
1 - 100Screening for lung cancer
Screening for lung cancer
Consequences of screening for lung cancer (NELSON)
Screening smokers for lung cancer with low-dose CT decreases lung cancer mortality
Italian lung cancer screening findings consistent with US National Lung Screening Trial results (ITALUNG)
Uncertain risks and benefits of CT screening for lung cancer
High false-positive rate with lung cancer screening
USPSTF recommends lung cancer screening for some smokers
Spiral CT detects early lung cancer, but screening use is premature
CT screening for lung cancer: more cancers detected, no mortality benefit (DANTE)
Lung cancer screening may increase the likelihood of smoking cessation
Lung cancer screening is cost effective, but only if done correctly
Impact of low‐dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening on lung cancer‐related mortality
Adherence to lung cancer screening is relatively poor after baseline scan
Lower mortality with CT screening for lung cancer, but at very high cost
Systematic review: lung cancer screening with CT decreases mortality but with significant harms
Lung cancer is infrequently found via screening, but follow-up imaging is common
Annual screening chest x-ray does not reduce lung cancer mortality
Lung cancer screening requires additional imaging in 40% of patients in real world
Low-dose CT screening of smokers decreases lung cancer deaths, but not overall mortality
Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT does not affect smoking cessation rates
Volume-based low-dose CT screening reduces lung cancer–specific mortality (NELSON)
USPSTF 2021 recommends annual lung cancer screening based on shared decision-making in high-risk adults (B recommendation)
After community lung cancer screening, rates of follow-up imaging are lower but the rates of some procedures are higher