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Showing papers by "Elizabeth Ward published in 2013"


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 2013-Cancer
TL;DR: An estimate of the annual number of lung cancer deaths that can be averted by screening is provided, assuming the screening regimens adopted in the NLST are fully implemented in the United States.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The National Lung Screening Trial (NLST), which was conducted between 2002 and 2009, demonstrated that screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduced lung cancer mortality by 20% among screening-eligible populations compared with chest x-ray In this article, the authors provide an estimate of the annual number of lung cancer deaths that can be averted by screening, assuming the screening regimens adopted in the NLST are fully implemented in the United States METHODS: The annual number of lung cancer deaths that can be averted by screening was estimated as a product of the screening effect, the US population size (obtained from the 2010 US Census data), the prevalence of screening eligibility (estimated using the 2010 National Health Interview Survey [NHIS] data), and the lung cancer mortality rates among screening-eligible populations (estimated using the NHIS data from 2000-2004 and the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey linked mortality files) Analyses were performed separately by sex, age, and smoking status, with Poisson regression analysis used for mortality rate estimation Uncertainty of the estimates of the number of avertable lung cancer deaths was quantified by simulation RESULTS: Approximately 86 million Americans (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 80 million-92 million), including 52 million men (95% CI, 48 million-57 million) and 34 million women (95% CI, 30 million -38 million), were eligible for lung cancer screening in 2010 If the screening regimen adopted in the NLST was fully implemented among these screening-eligible US populations, a total of 12,250 (95% CI, 10,170-15,671) lung cancer deaths (8990 deaths in men and 3260 deaths in women) would be averted each year CONCLUSIONS: The data from the current study indicate that LDCT screening could potentially avert approximately 12,000 lung cancer deaths per year in the United States Further studies are needed to estimate the number of avertable lung cancer deaths and the cost-effectiveness of LDCT screening under different scenarios of risk, various screening frequencies, and various screening uptake rates (See editorial on pages 000–000, this issue) Cancer 2013 © 2012 American Cancer Society

186 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The coexistence of obesity or underweight with current smoking was associated with an especially large risk of death and the associations of BMI with mortality varied by smoking status, age, and cause of death.

26 citations