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			 Researchers found that cutoff criteria that work for white smokers 
			may lead to missed cancers in blacks, according to the report in 
			JAMA Oncology. 
 "Our current lung cancer screening guidelines are woefully 
			inadequate in providing equal opportunity for African Americans to 
			be eligible for screening," said Melinda Aldrich, an assistant 
			professor at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, 
			Tennessee, who led the study.
 
 "It's time to move the needle. If the guidelines continue as they 
			are, they will potentially exacerbate racial disparities in lung 
			cancer outcomes."
 
 The new study, which looked at new lung cancer cases in a 
			predominantly low-income and black population, found that under 
			criteria in current U.S. Preventative Services Task Force (USPSTF) 
			guidelines, many African Americans diagnosed with lung cancer would 
			not have been eligible for early screening because they didn't have 
			a high enough number of cigarettes or years of smoking in their 
			history.
 
			
			 
			
 To take a closer look at how the criteria impacted black smokers, 
			Aldrich and her colleagues turned to data from the Southern 
			Community Cohort Study, an ongoing observational research project 
			designed to examine health disparities in low-income African 
			Americans.
 
 Between March 25, 2002 and September 24, 2009, the SCCS enrolled 
			84,522 adults, of whom some 48,000 were current or former smokers: 
			32,463 of them black and 15,901 white. Researchers followed the 
			participants until December 31, 2014, by which time 1,269 new lung 
			cancers had been diagnosed.
 
 Participants had been asked about their lifetime smoking history, 
			which researchers quantified in "pack years," the number of packs of 
			cigarettes a smoker consumed daily multiplied by the number of years 
			they smoked. So, for example, two packs per day for one year or one 
			pack a day for two years would equal two pack years.
 
 The current guidelines suggest lung cancer screening for smokers 
			with 30 pack years or more. Aldrich would like to see that lowered. 
			"This (study) is a wakeup call for the community to make people 
			aware who are currently evaluating the guidelines," she said.
 
 Among the black participants who were current or former smokers, 
			half had about 25 pack years or more, and only 17% would qualify for 
			screening under the current guidelines, while among whites, half had 
			48 pack years or more and 31% would qualify for screening.
 
 
			
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			Among people diagnosed with lung cancer during the study period, 32% 
			of the black and 56% of the white participants would have qualified 
			for screening.
 While commending the Vanderbilt team on their research, cancer 
			experts said the issue is more complicated than simply altering a 
			pack-year cutoff.
 
 "As the authors point out, the Task Force recommendations were made 
			on the basis of data that did not include adequate representation of 
			African Americans, so this type of study is important to help us 
			identify and address sources of racial inequality in cancer 
			screening," said Jaimee Heffner, an assistant member of the cancer 
			prevention program at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in 
			Seattle, Washington.
 
			"The study results are a red flag that we should pay attention to, 
			but it would be premature to recommend changing the guidelines on 
			the basis of this study alone," Heffner said in an email. "We need 
			to consider not just the potential benefits, but also the potential 
			harms, like false positive results and complications from invasive 
			diagnostic procedures. It's not clear how earlier initiation of 
			screening at lower pack-year levels for African Americans would 
			impact the benefit-to-harm ratio."
 You factor in the dangers associated with the screening, agreed Dr. 
			Otis Brawley, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at the Johns Hopkins 
			Kimmel Cancer Center in Baltimore, Maryland. "For every 5.4 patients 
			saved, one is lost due to a hospital- or screening-based 
			intervention," he said.
 
			
			 
			
 The task force's recommendations were based on studies "at 32 of the 
			finest hospitals in the U.S.," Brawley said. "You have to wonder 
			what the data would be in a county hospital in Georgia, for example, 
			and what the lung cancer screening benefit-to-risk ratio would be at 
			an average hospital in the U.S."
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2Yh3jWH JAMA Oncology, online June 27, 2019.
 
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