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The 2021 US Preventive Services Task Force Lung Cancer Screening Criteria Miss Many Patients Diagnosed with Early- and Late-Stage Lung Cancer: Analysis of Three Cohort Studies.

Chest 2026

Potter AL, Guo Q, Rettner B, Zhu A, Potter A, Zheng W, Kothari J, Shafer A, Martin LW, Pasquinelli MM, Christiani DC, Jeffrey Yang CF

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

[BACKGROUND] Lung cancer screening (LCS) aims to detect lung cancers-that have historically been diagnosed at late stages-at earlier stages when the likelihood of cure is high.

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 연구 설계 cohort study

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BibTeX ↓ RIS ↓
APA Potter AL, Guo Q, et al. (2026). The 2021 US Preventive Services Task Force Lung Cancer Screening Criteria Miss Many Patients Diagnosed with Early- and Late-Stage Lung Cancer: Analysis of Three Cohort Studies.. Chest. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2026.01.033
MLA Potter AL, et al.. "The 2021 US Preventive Services Task Force Lung Cancer Screening Criteria Miss Many Patients Diagnosed with Early- and Late-Stage Lung Cancer: Analysis of Three Cohort Studies.." Chest, 2026.
PMID 41887280

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Lung cancer screening (LCS) aims to detect lung cancers-that have historically been diagnosed at late stages-at earlier stages when the likelihood of cure is high. However, the proportion of individuals diagnosed with late-stage lung cancer in the U.S. who would have qualified for LCS is unknown.

[RESEARCH QUESTION] What proportion of individuals diagnosed with early-stage versus late-stage lung cancer would have qualified for LCS under the 2021 U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommendation?

[STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS] Participants diagnosed with lung cancer in the Boston Lung Cancer Study (BLCS), a cancer epidemiology cohort study in Boston, MA, as well as the Southern Community Cohort Study (SCCS) and Multiethnic Cohort Study (MECS), two large-scale U.S. prospective cohort studies, were identified. In each cohort, we grouped participants according to whether they were diagnosed with early-stage or late-stage lung cancer. The proportion of participants with late-stage lung cancer eligible under the 2021 USPSTF recommendation was evaluated and compared to that among participants with early-stage lung cancer.

[RESULTS] A total of 7,017 participants in the BLCS, 1,807 in the SCCS, and 5,681 in the MECS were included. Among participants with late-stage lung cancer, the proportion eligible under the 2021 USPSTF recommendation was 41.2% in the BLCS, 58.9% in the SCCS, and 41.4% in the MECS. Similar proportions of participants diagnosed with early-stage versus late-stage lung cancer met the USPSTF criteria in each cohort. The most common reason for ineligibility among both groups of participants was smoking <20-pack-years in the SCCS and MECS and stopping smoking >15 years ago in the BLCS.

[INTERPRETATION] In this analysis of nearly 15,000 participants with lung cancer, only 41-59% of participants with late-stage lung cancer would have met the 2021 USPSTF recommendation; similar proportions of participants with early-stage lung cancer would have met the 2021 USPSTF recommendation.

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