FEBRUARY
25, 2021 2:26 AM AEDT
When MUSC Hollings Cancer Center researcher Marvella
Ford, Ph.D., and colleague Nestor F. Esnaola, M.D., a senior leader
at Houston Methodist Hospital, began a study funded by the National Institutes
of Health (NIH) that aimed to increase surgery rates among Black Americans with
early-stage lung cancer, they were shocked to uncover how difficult it was to
find 200 patients who were eligible to enroll.
Despite
expanding recruitment locations from just five cancer center sites in South
Carolina and Georgia to community-based cancer centers across the U.S., most
Black patients who were diagnosed with lung cancer at the study sites had
already progressed to stage 3 or 4 disease.
For Ford and
Esnaola, the finding was a stark reminder of the disparities that exist when it
comes to lung cancer screening and treatment.
“It took us
over six years and 22 sites across the country from Delaware to Nevada to reach
our accrual goal, and that made us take a long, hard look,” said Ford,
associate director of Population Sciences and Cancer Disparities at Hollings.
“We had a
number of study participants who were enrolled simply because of incidental
findings. They broke their leg and went to the hospital, or they thought they
had the flu and had a chest X-ray, which ended up finding lung cancer. These
findings highlight the need for a national lung cancer screening program so we
can reach the medically underserved and communities of color that are most at
risk of developing lung cancer.”
Lung cancer
incidence and mortality rates in the U.S. vary by race, ethnicity,
socioeconomic status and sex. Causing more deaths each year than breast,
prostate and colon cancers combined, lung cancer has a particularly low
five-year survival rate, partially because about 75% of patients are diagnosed
with late-stage disease, when the possibility of a cure is less likely.
Evidence has
shown that lung cancer screening in individuals at high risk due to their age
and smoking history can result in as much as a 24% decrease in mortality.
Current screening guidelines, however, don’t consider racial, ethnic,
socioeconomic or sex-based differences in smoking behaviors and lung cancer
risk, leaving those who are most vulnerable without equitable access to
screening, said Ford.
To bring
awareness to these disparities, Ford and Hollings thoracic oncologist Nichole
Tanner, M.D., recently contributed to a set of statements released by the American
Thoracic Society to identify gaps in care and to offer strategies for ensuring
equity in lung cancer screening, improving tobacco treatment and breaking down
health system, provider and patient barriers to screening.
The statements
were created by a multidisciplinary panel with expertise in lung cancer
screening, implementation science, primary care, pulmonology, health behavior,
smoking cessation, epidemiology and disparities research.
Currently, the
lung cancer screening guidelines set forth by the U.S. Preventive Services Task
Force in 2013 recommend annual screening in adults over 55 who have a 30
pack-year smoking history (an average of one pack of cigarettes smoked per day
for 30 years or two packs smoked per day for 15 years) and who currently smoke
or have quit within the past 15 years.
According to
Ford and Tanner, the problem with this is that tobacco pack-year history is
difficult to calculate and often changes based on a patient’s memory and
current smoking practices. Studies have shown that self-reported smoking
history information recorded in patients’ electronic medical records is wrong
roughly 90% of the time, and some patients aren’t even asked about their
tobacco use.
“In many
communities and health care systems, patients are not even being identified as
smokers, they’re not getting referred for smoking cessation services, and
they’re not getting screened. That’s a major issue across the country,” said
Ford.
“There are
several multi-level barriers to lung cancer screening, including the cost of
the screening or copay, reaching people in medically underserved areas who may
not engage with the health system and a lack of plain language in educational
materials about the dangers of smoking.”
Other barriers
to screening include transportation to centers that offer lung cancer
screening, which may be distant from a person’s community; insurance coverage
that varies by state; and screenings that are only available during normal
business hours, limiting the ability of those who work full-time jobs to
schedule an appointment.
According to
Tanner, mistrust of the health care system and stigma surrounding smoking also
prevent those who are at risk from accessing screenings.
“This is the
first time physicians are asking patients to come in for a screening not
because of age alone, but because of a poor health habit,” said Tanner. “People
who smoke are less likely to have a primary care provider, they’re less likely
to be insured, and they’re often of a lower socioeconomic status, which are all
things that keep people from seeing any providers at all. Reducing stigma is
huge because smokers often have a lot of guilt and may feel like their cancer
was self-imposed.”
Strategies
offered in the recently released American Thoracic Society statements for
reducing these barriers at a health systems level include:
§ Implementing patient navigators to increase
uptake among vulnerable populations.
§ Providing evidence-based tobacco treatment and
counseling that accounts for differences in cultural beliefs and health
literacy.
§ Researching the feasibility of using mobile
health units or telehealth to reach people who face geographic barriers.
At Hollings,
Ford and Esnaola are analyzing data from their study that examined whether
assigning a patient navigator to Black Americans with lung cancer could help
address the transportation, social and financial barriers that may prevent some
of these patients from receiving much-needed surgical treatment. Ford also
leads a range of community outreach efforts aimed at understanding
and reducing the cancer burden among the state’s most vulnerable populations.
“When you look
at the fact that Black Americans are nearly 50% less likely to receive surgery
for early-stage lung cancer than white Americans, it means that a lot of people
are dying unnecessarily and that there’s a lot of room for intervention. That’s
what’s exciting to me.”
– Dr. Marvella
Ford
Additionally,
Hollings offers a comprehensive Lung Cancer Screening Program that
merges screening services with a robust tobacco treatment program, offering providers an
opportunity to have a conversation with high-risk patients about the dangers of
smoking and to link them with specialized counselors.
Ford and
Tanner hope the statements will bring attention to the need for more federal
funding for lung cancer screening and treatment for the medically underserved
and other at-risk populations. This includes people living in rural areas,
where smoking and lung cancer prevalence is high.
While lung
cancer screenings can be lifesaving, a national effort is needed to ensure all
high-risk groups can benefit from them equally. Tanner said she hopes the
statements will be a catalyst for change that will improve access to quality
care.
“The end goal
for me is to reach these patients and catch their cancer at an earlier stage
when we can cure them so that they don’t have to die of this. I want lung
cancer to be something that people no longer have to die of,” said Tanner.
Ford agreed.
“When you look at the fact that Black Americans are nearly 50% less likely to
receive surgery for early-stage lung cancer than white Americans, it means that
a lot of people are dying unnecessarily and that there’s a lot of room for
intervention. That’s what’s exciting to me. Making lung cancer screening and
treatment accessible to broader populations means that we can help people to
lead longer, healthier lives, but we need increased funding to do this.”
Uni Release. This material comes from the
originating organization and may be of a point-in-time nature, edited for
clarity, style and length. View in full here.
https://www.miragenews.com/researchers-sound-alarm-on-disparities-in-lung-518994/
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