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Economic Value of Bronchoscopy Technologies that Improves Sensitivity for Malignancy for Peripheral Pulmonary Lesions
Ost, David E; Maldonado, Fabien; Shafrin, Jason; Kim, Jaehong; Marin, Moises A; Amos, Tony B; Hertz, Deanna S; Kalsekar, Iftekhar; Vachani, Anil
PMID: 39178335
ISSN: 2325-6621
CID: 5899432
Innovations in Early Lung Cancer Detection: Tracing the Evolution and Advancements in Screening
Cotton, Lindsey B; Bach, Peter B; Cisar, Chris; Schonewolf, Caitlin A; Tennefoss, Demetria; Vachani, Anil; Carter-Bawa, Lisa; Zaidi, Ali H
Lung cancer mortality rates, particularly non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), continue to present a significant global health challenge, and the adoption of lung cancer screening remains limited, often influenced by inequities in access to healthcare. Despite clinical evidence demonstrating the efficacy of annual screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) and recommendations from medical organizations including the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), the national lung cancer screening uptake remains around 5% among eligible individuals. Advancements in the clinical management of NSCLC have recently become more personalized with the implementation of blood-based biomarker testing. Extensive research into tumor-derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) through fragmentation offers a novel method for improving early lung cancer detection. This review assesses the screening landscape, explores obstacles to lung cancer screening, and discusses how a plasma whole genome fragmentome test (pWGFrag-Lung) can improve lung cancer screening participation and adherence.
PMCID:11355097
PMID: 39201053
ISSN: 2077-0383
CID: 5899442
University of Pennsylvania Telehealth Research Center of Excellence
Wainwright, Jocelyn V; Aggarwal, Charu; Beucker, Sarah; Dougherty, David W; Gabriel, Peter E; Jacobs, Linda A; Kalman, Jillian; Linn, Kristin A; Martella, Anthony O; Mehta, Shivan J; Rhodes, Corinne M; Roy, Megan; Schapira, Marilyn M; Shulman, Lawrence N; Steltz, Jennifer; Stephens Shields, Alisa J; Tan, Andy S L; Thompson, Jeffrey C; Toneff, Hannah; Wender, Richard C; Zeb, Sana; Rendle, Katharine A; Vachani, Anil; Bekelman, Justin E; ,
Drawing from insights from communication science and behavioral economics, the University of Pennsylvania Telehealth Research Center of Excellence (Penn TRACE) is designing and testing telehealth strategies with the potential to transform access to care, care quality, outcomes, health equity, and health-care efficiency across the cancer care continuum, with an emphasis on understanding mechanisms of action. Penn TRACE uses lung cancer care as an exemplar model for telehealth across the care continuum, from screening to treatment to survivorship. We bring together a diverse and interdisciplinary team of international experts and incorporate rapid-cycle approaches and mixed methods evaluation in all center projects. Our initiatives include a pragmatic sequential multiple assignment randomized trial to compare the effectiveness of telehealth strategies to increase shared decision-making for lung cancer screening and 2 pilot projects to test the effectiveness of telehealth to improve cancer care, identify multilevel mechanisms of action, and lay the foundation for future pragmatic trials. Penn TRACE aims to produce new fundamental knowledge and advance telehealth science in cancer care at Penn and nationally.
PMCID:11207744
PMID: 38924794
ISSN: 1745-6614
CID: 5899422
Reply [Letter]
Vachani, Anil; Zhou, Meijia; Ghosh, Sudip; Zhang, Shumin; Szapary, Philippe; Gaurav, Dheeraj; Kalsekar, Iftekhar
PMID: 37302682
ISSN: 1558-349x
CID: 5899252
Web Exclusive. Annals On Call - Real-World Complications of Lung Cancer Screening
Centor, Robert M; Rendle, Katharine A; Vachani, Anil
PMID: 38498896
ISSN: 1539-3704
CID: 5899412
Quantifying the Value of Reduced Health Disparities: Low-Dose Computed Tomography Lung Cancer Screening of High-Risk Individuals Within the United States
Shafrin, Jason; Kim, Jaehong; Marin, Moises; Ramsagar, Sangeetha; Davies, Mark Lloyd; Stewart, Kyana; Kalsekar, Iftekhar; Vachani, Anil
OBJECTIVE:This study aimed to measure the value of increasing lung cancer screening rates for high-risk individuals and its impact on health disparities. METHODS:The model estimated changes in health economic outcomes if low-dose computed tomography screening increased from current to 100% compliance, following clinical guidelines. Current low-dose computed tomography screening rates were estimated by income, education, and race, using 2017-2019 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data. The model contained a decision tree module to segment the population by screening outcomes and a Markov chain module to estimate cancer progression over time. Model parameters included information on survival, quality of life, and costs related to cancer diagnosis, treatment, and adverse events. Distributional cost-effectiveness analysis estimated the net monetary value from reduced health disparities-measured using quality-adjusted life expectancy-across income, education, and race groups. Outcomes were assessed over 30 years. RESULTS:Lung cancer screening eligibility using US Preventive Services Task Force guidelines was higher for individuals with income <$15 000 (47.2%) and without a high-school education (46.1%) than individuals with income >$50 000 (16.6%) and with a college degree (13.5%), respectively. Increasing lung cancer screening to 100% compliance was cost-effective ($64 654 per quality-adjusted life-year) and produced economic value by up to $560 per person ($182.1 billion for United States overall). Up to 32.2% of the value was due to reductions in health disparities. CONCLUSIONS:Significant value in increasing lung cancer screening rates derived from reducing health disparities. Policy makers and clinicians may not be appropriately prioritizing cancer screening if value from reducing health disparities is unconsidered.
PMID: 38191024
ISSN: 1524-4733
CID: 5899392
Uptake of Lung Cancer Screening CT After a Provider Order for Screening in the PROSPR-Lung Consortium
Neslund-Dudas, Christine; Tang, Amy; Alleman, Elizabeth; Zarins, Katie R; Li, Pin; Simoff, Michael J; Lafata, Jennifer Elston; Rendle, Katharine A; Hartman, Andrea N Burnett; Honda, Stacey A; Oshiro, Caryn; Olaiya, Oluwatosin; Greenlee, Robert T; Vachani, Anil; Ritzwoller, Debra P
BACKGROUND:Uptake of lung cancer screening (LCS) has been slow with less than 20% of eligible people who currently or formerly smoked reported to have undergone a screening CT. OBJECTIVE:To determine individual-, health system-, and neighborhood-level factors associated with LCS uptake after a provider order for screening. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS/METHODS:We conducted an observational cohort study of screening-eligible patients within the Population-based Research to Optimize the Screening Process (PROSPR)-Lung Consortium who received a radiology referral/order for a baseline low-dose screening CT (LDCT) from a healthcare provider between January 1, 2015, and June 30, 2019. MAIN MEASURES/METHODS:The primary outcome is screening uptake, defined as LCS-LDCT completion within 90 days of the screening order date. KEY RESULTS/RESULTS:During the study period, 18,294 patients received their first order for LCS-LDCT. Orders more than doubled from the beginning to the end of the study period. Overall, 60% of patients completed screening after receiving their first LCS-LDCT order. Across health systems, uptake varied from 41 to 87%. In both univariate and multivariable analyses, older age, male sex, former smoking status, COPD, and receiving care in a centralized LCS program were positively associated with completing LCS-LDCT. Unknown insurance status, other or unknown race, and lower neighborhood socioeconomic status, as measured by the Yost Index, were negatively associated with screening uptake. CONCLUSIONS:Overall, 40% of patients referred for LCS did not complete a LDCT within 90 days, highlighting a substantial gap in the lung screening care pathway, particularly in decentralized screening programs.
PMCID:10853157
PMID: 37783984
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 5899342
An NLP Framework for the Extraction of Concept Measurements from Radiology and Pathology Notes
Bowles, Annie; Perez, Cris; Vachani, Anil; Steltz, Jennifer; Rose, Brent; Bryant, Alex K; Eyre, Hannah; DuVall, Scott L; Lynch, Julie A; Alba, Patrick R
Natural language processing (NLP) tools can automate the identification of cancer patients eligible for specific pathways. We developed and validated a cancer agnostic, rules-based NLP framework to extract the dimensions and measurements of several concepts from pathology and radiology reports. This framework was then efficiently and cost-effectively deployed to identify patients eligible for breast, lung, and prostate cancers clinical pathways.
PMID: 38269689
ISSN: 1879-8365
CID: 5899402
Rates of Downstream Procedures and Complications Associated With Lung Cancer Screening in Routine Clinical Practice : A Retrospective Cohort Study
Rendle, Katharine A; Saia, Chelsea A; Vachani, Anil; Burnett-Hartman, Andrea N; Doria-Rose, V Paul; Beucker, Sarah; Neslund-Dudas, Christine; Oshiro, Caryn; Kim, Roger Y; Elston-Lafata, Jennifer; Honda, Stacey A; Ritzwoller, Debra; Wainwright, Jocelyn V; Mitra, Nandita; Greenlee, Robert T
BACKGROUND:Lung cancer screening (LCS) using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduces lung cancer mortality but can lead to downstream procedures, complications, and other potential harms. Estimates of these events outside NLST (National Lung Screening Trial) have been variable and lacked evaluation by screening result, which allows more direct comparison with trials. OBJECTIVE:To identify rates of downstream procedures and complications associated with LCS. DESIGN:Retrospective cohort study. SETTING:5 U.S. health care systems. PATIENTS:Individuals who completed a baseline LDCT scan for LCS between 2014 and 2018. MEASUREMENTS:Outcomes included downstream imaging, invasive diagnostic procedures, and procedural complications. For each, absolute rates were calculated overall and stratified by screening result and by lung cancer detection, and positive and negative predictive values were calculated. RESULTS:Among the 9266 screened patients, 1472 (15.9%) had a baseline LDCT scan showing abnormalities, of whom 140 (9.5%) were diagnosed with lung cancer within 12 months (positive predictive value, 9.5% [95% CI, 8.0% to 11.0%]; negative predictive value, 99.8% [CI, 99.7% to 99.9%]; sensitivity, 92.7% [CI, 88.6% to 96.9%]; specificity, 84.4% [CI, 83.7% to 85.2%]). Absolute rates of downstream imaging and invasive procedures in screened patients were 31.9% and 2.8%, respectively. In patients undergoing invasive procedures after abnormal findings, complication rates were substantially higher than those in NLST (30.6% vs. 17.7% for any complication; 20.6% vs. 9.4% for major complications). LIMITATION:Assessment of outcomes was retrospective and was based on procedural coding. CONCLUSION:The results indicate substantially higher rates of downstream procedures and complications associated with LCS in practice than observed in NLST. Diagnostic management likely needs to be assessed and improved to ensure that screening benefits outweigh potential harms. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE:National Cancer Institute and Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
PMCID:11111256
PMID: 38163370
ISSN: 1539-3704
CID: 5899382
Together We Go Farther: Improving Access to Cancer Screening Through a Multidisciplinary, One-Stop-Shop Approach
Ginzberg, Sara P; Edmonds, Christine E; Dako, Farouk; Donnell, Terrilynn; Washington, Armenta L; Elmore, Leisha C; Lee, Daniel J; Vachani, Anil; Mincarelli, Deborah; Zeballos Torrez, Carla; McCormick, Thomas M; Rodriguez, Veronica; Nguyen, Vivian; Oliva, Catherine; Atherholt, Barbara; Gaiser, Raymond; Congiu, Lawrence; Grant, Brandon; Gungor, Murat; Englander, Brian S; Guerra, Carmen E; Nunes, Linda W
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES:Despite significant scientific advances in cancer treatment in recent decades, Black Americans still face marked inequities in cancer screening, diagnosis, and treatment. Redressing these persistent inequities will require innovative strategies for community engagement. Radiologists, as experts in cancer screening and diagnosis for multiple malignancies, including breast, lung, and colon, are ideally suited to lead and implement community-based strategies to address local cancer disparities. MATERIALS AND METHODS:Through an established academic-community partnership in West Philadelphia built over the course of multiple prior community healthcare events, the authors piloted a novel radiology-led multidisciplinary approach to improve access to cancer screening for the predominantly Black, medically-underserved residents. Using a "one-stop-shop" framework to provide a comprehensive suite of screening and ancillary services in the heart of the community, the authors sought to remove as many impediments to screening as possible. RESULTS:Approximately 350 participants attended the health fair, and a total of 232 screening tests or assessments were completed. Data from this event suggest that this inclusive approach, as well as the use of a health fair "passport" to incentivize engagement, can successfully improve access to screening and follow-up in an underserved community. CONCLUSION:This "one-stop-shop" community approach can be replicated by radiology-led teams in other settings as a high-value, scalable opportunity to reduce disparities in access to cancer screening.
PMID: 37714719
ISSN: 1878-4046
CID: 5899332