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About 320. The number of people who would have to be scanned for three years to prevent a single death from lung cancer. That's impressive when compared to the 1,339 women in their 50s who would need to have mammograms for several years to avoid one breast cancer death. However, mammograms are cheaper and involve less radiation so the risks and benefits aren't quite the same.
One percent. The odds of dying from surgery for lung cancer among those in the study. In general practice, it's 4 percent.
$300 to $1,200. The average range of charges for a scan. At some private practices it's up to $2,500 and "there's a group in Hollywood that's charging more than that," said Berg, of the National Cancer Institute.
Researchers plan a cost-effectiveness study and may compare the benefit from scans to smoking cessation efforts.
"People should not take this positive study as `now it is safe to smoke,'" because it isn't, and quitting remains the best way to lower cancer risk, Brawley said.
The cancer society and other medical groups expect to have screening advice for the public "in a matter of months," said Dr. Bruce Johnson, a lung cancer expert at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and a board member of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, doctors who treat the disease.
"Can society afford it? This comes with a substantial cost," he said of screening.
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