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Oncology NEWS International. Vol. 14 No. 3 3
 

Spiral CT Scanning Finds Very Early Lung Cancers, ELCAP Data Show

By ROY S. HERBST, MD, PhD
The University of Texas
M . D. Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, Texas
| March 1, 2005

WASHINGTON-The Early Lung Cancer Action Program (ELCAP) has tested CT screening over the last decade and shown significant improvements in screening technology and substantially improved cure rates for cancers caught early. At the lung cancer workshop Application of High Resolution CT Imaging Data to Lung Cancer Drug Development, sponsored by the Cancer Research and Prevention Foundation, Claudia I. Henschke, MD, PhD, presented the most recent results from ELCAP. She also provided a glimpse of imaging of the future, in which a CT image could give as much detail as a pathology image. Every time a cell divides, it is called a doubling, said Dr. Henschke, professor of radiology, Weill Medical College of Cornell University. It takes about 40 doublings for lung cancer to reach the size that causes death from primary disease or metastasis, she said. Chest x-ray can reveal, at best, a 1-cm cancer, but typically only detects cancers that are 2 cm or larger. These are cancers that have already undergone about 30 to 32 doubling times. Helical or spiral CT, on the other hand, can detect 2-mm lesions. These lesions have undergone about 22 doubling times, which is still in the second half of the lifetime of the lung cancer, Dr. Henschke said. "The exciting potential of newer CT technologies that we're working on is that we can finally get into the first half of the lifetime of that lung cancer and detect lesions that are 1 mm or smaller," she said. ELCAP started in 1993 screening individuals at high risk for lung cancer- age 60 and older with a smoking history of a pack-a-day for 10 years. The international collaboration, involving 33 institutions, has accumulated 26,557 baseline scans, 19,742 repeat scans, and 373 cancers. They are collaborating with several European screening trials using the same system to pool data. Of cancers detected to date in ELCAP, 80% were stage I disease, a stark contrast to usual care, in which only 5% to 15% of lung cancers are diagnosed at stage I. The 8-year case fatality rate for all stages of resected patients in ELCAP was 4%. In the National Cancer Institute's Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program, overall fatality is about 30%. Throughout the past decade, Dr. Henschke's team has been applying technological improvements to ELCAP. The latest advance is volume CT, which was developed based on research from Dr. Henschke's group. In helical or spiral CT, the table moves around the patient as each row of detectors scans a part of the body. One row of detectors was improved to 2 rows, and soon to 64. The image is then built from 64 slices. With volume CT, instead of rows of detectors, one to four plates are in the scanner, allowing continuous slicing. "These plates are getting all of the information at one time, instead of one row at a time," she said. It increases resolution, and the patient is in the scanner for a very short time. New scanners-used only in mice, but to be tested soon in humans- can obtain the whole volume of the lungs and improve resolution 30-fold over today's best scanners, she said. The scans show bronchi, bony skeleton, and sternum. "It will make a big difference in what we can see," she said. Along with better imaging devices have come improved image processing, which will "provide more analytic tools to identify and measure abnormal areas ," Dr. Henschke said. She pointed out the importance of distinguishing nodule consistency, noting which parts are solid, part solid, and nonsolid. Each grows at different rates, and her data show that part solid nodules are three times more likely to be malignant than solid and nonsolid nodules. Being able to view vascular structures in relation to the tumor helps as well. Knowing these details about a tumor "may very well determine what our treatment options may be. Potentially, as we get more accuracy in volumetric tools, we may go directly to surgery or to some other treatment devised for these small cancers," she said. Dr. Henschke ended with interesting findings in smoking cessation: 25% of smokers who go through her screening and receive smoking cessation information quit and are still not smoking at 1 year. "People used to call me up, especially if I went through their scan with them, and say 'Every time I lit a cigarette, I thought of my CT scan," she said.

 

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50,000 Enrolled in National Lung Screening Trial BETHESDA, Maryland-Researchers have completed enrollment for the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST), achieving their goal of accruing 50,000 current and former smokers in a study to determine whether screening with spiral CT or chest x-rays before lung cancer symptoms occur can reduce mortality. The screening portion of the study is filled. Some centers continue to collect blood, urine, and phlegm from symptomless smokers or former smokers as part of an effort to identify biomarkers or tumor markers of lung cancer. Participants in the randomized, controlled study will receive either a spiral CT scan or a chest x-ray annually for 3 years, and their health status will be monitored until 2009. Two NCI-funded programs, the American College of Radiology Imaging Network and the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial, are conducting the NLST at 30 US sites.



An Annual Review of Lung Cancer


 
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