Comparison of Lung Cancer Screening Programs in Liver Transplant Recipients and the General Population.
2/5 보강
OpenAlex 토픽 ·
Transplantation: Methods and Outcomes
Lung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
Viral-associated cancers and disorders
[OBJECTIVES] The objectives of this study are to analyse whether liver transplant recipients (LTR) have a higher incidence of lung cancer (LC) compared to a population of high risk smokers enrolled in
- p-value p=0.056
- p-value p=0.003
- HR 3.0
APA
Meylin Caballeros Lam, Paula Raquel Pujols León, et al. (2026). Comparison of Lung Cancer Screening Programs in Liver Transplant Recipients and the General Population.. Archivos de bronconeumologia. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arbres.2026.03.010
MLA
Meylin Caballeros Lam, et al.. "Comparison of Lung Cancer Screening Programs in Liver Transplant Recipients and the General Population.." Archivos de bronconeumologia, 2026.
PMID
42031619 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[OBJECTIVES] The objectives of this study are to analyse whether liver transplant recipients (LTR) have a higher incidence of lung cancer (LC) compared to a population of high risk smokers enrolled in a LC screening program and to evaluate if LC screening results allow an early diagnosis in LTRs.
[METHODS] We conducted a retrospective study comparing LC screening outcomes using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) in 124 LTRs and 485 matched non-immunosuppressed controls. Matching criteria included age, sex, smoking history, active smoking status, and presence of emphysema. Tumour characteristics, staging, treatment, and survival were analysed.
[RESULTS] LC was diagnosed in 9.7% of LTRs and 4.5% of controls (p=0.11). LTRs more frequently presented with squamous cell carcinoma, while adenocarcinoma predominated in controls. Early-stage diagnosis (stage IA) was more common in LTRs (83.4% vs. 50%, p=0.056). Survival after diagnosis was comparable between groups in the first three years, although LTRs showed reduced long-term survival. Multivariate analysis identified cumulative tobacco exposure>35 pack-years (HR=3.0; p=0.003), and centrilobular emphysema (HR: 2.8; p=0.004) as independent risk factors for LC, liver transplantation showed an association close to significance (HR: 1.9; p=0.08).
[CONCLUSIONS] LTRs have a higher incidence of LC than matched non-immunosuppressed individuals. LDCT screening enables early detection and favourable outcomes. These findings support routine LC screening in high-risk LTRs, particularly those with significant smoking histories, and centrilobular emphysema.
[METHODS] We conducted a retrospective study comparing LC screening outcomes using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) in 124 LTRs and 485 matched non-immunosuppressed controls. Matching criteria included age, sex, smoking history, active smoking status, and presence of emphysema. Tumour characteristics, staging, treatment, and survival were analysed.
[RESULTS] LC was diagnosed in 9.7% of LTRs and 4.5% of controls (p=0.11). LTRs more frequently presented with squamous cell carcinoma, while adenocarcinoma predominated in controls. Early-stage diagnosis (stage IA) was more common in LTRs (83.4% vs. 50%, p=0.056). Survival after diagnosis was comparable between groups in the first three years, although LTRs showed reduced long-term survival. Multivariate analysis identified cumulative tobacco exposure>35 pack-years (HR=3.0; p=0.003), and centrilobular emphysema (HR: 2.8; p=0.004) as independent risk factors for LC, liver transplantation showed an association close to significance (HR: 1.9; p=0.08).
[CONCLUSIONS] LTRs have a higher incidence of LC than matched non-immunosuppressed individuals. LDCT screening enables early detection and favourable outcomes. These findings support routine LC screening in high-risk LTRs, particularly those with significant smoking histories, and centrilobular emphysema.
🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (1)
🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반
- Lung Cancer Screening in Adults: State-of-the-Art and Policy Mapping (2025).
- Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors for Recurrent Hepatocellular Carcinoma After Liver Transplantation: Safety Under an Immunosuppression-Preserving Strategy.
- Hepatitis B Immunoglobulins Withdrawal in Hepatitis B Virus Mono-Infected Liver Transplant Recipients: An Italian Multicentre Prospective Study.
- Impact of microvascular invasion on clinical outcomes in hepatocellular carcinoma patients following liver transplantation.
- Liver transplantation in Japan: Achievements, limitations, and future perspectives.
- Impact of portal vein embolisation uses in colorectal liver metastases: evidence from a rapid review.