LDCT-based Lung Cancer Screening and Small Cell Lung Cancer: limited but non-negligible impact on survival. A brief report

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Abstract

Introduction

Low-dose computed tomography (LDCT)-based lung cancer screening (LCS) seems to have very limited impact on small cell lung cancer (SCLC) outcomes. This study aims at describing frequency and outcomes of SCLC in a large LCS population.

Methods

Patients with a histological diagnosis of SCLC among the participants of 3 different trials (7473) were selected for the analysis. Demographic and clinical data were collected at the baseline and follow-up screening rounds, while the vital status and date of death were obtained through a dedicated national platform.

Results

Of the 396 diagnosed LCs, 28 (7.1%) were SCLCs; median survival time from the diagnosis was 1.5 years, and overall mortality was 71.4%. Screen-detected SCLCs were 20/28 (71.4%); 5/20 (25%) were prevalent cancers and 15/20 (75%) incident ones. Five-year mortality among the screen-detected and non-screen detected SCLCs was 70% and 62.5%, respectively.

Conclusion

The frequency of SCLC was lower as compared to other trials. Although no significant differences in 5-year mortality were observed between screen-detected and non-screen-detected SCLCs, the overall 5-year mortality was substantially lower than that reported in non-LCS populations, suggesting that LDCT-based LCS has an impact on SCLC outcome, albeit limited.

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