Suppr超能文献

在英国,一项针对具有肺癌风险的、种族和社会经济背景多样化人群的、提供低剂量 CT 肺癌筛查的肺部健康检查邀请参与情况的前瞻性纵向队列研究(SUMMIT):一项针对具有肺癌风险的、种族和社会经济背景多样化人群的、提供低剂量 CT 肺癌筛查的肺部健康检查邀请参与情况的前瞻性纵向队列研究。

Uptake of invitations to a lung health check offering low-dose CT lung cancer screening among an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse population at risk of lung cancer in the UK (SUMMIT): a prospective, longitudinal cohort study.

机构信息

Lungs for Living Research Centre, UCL Respiratory, University College London, London, UK.

Cancer Research UK and UCL Cancer Trials Centre, University College London, London, UK.

出版信息

Lancet Public Health. 2023 Feb;8(2):e130-e140. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(22)00258-4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Lung cancer screening with low-dose CT reduces lung cancer mortality, but screening requires equitable uptake from candidates at high risk of lung cancer across ethnic and socioeconomic groups that are under-represented in clinical studies. We aimed to assess the uptake of invitations to a lung health check offering low-dose CT lung cancer screening in an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse cohort at high risk of lung cancer.

METHODS

In this multicentre, prospective, longitudinal cohort study (SUMMIT), individuals aged 55-77 years with a history of smoking in the past 20 years were identified via National Health Service England primary care records at practices in northeast and north-central London, UK, using electronic searches. Eligible individuals were invited by letter to a lung health check offering lung cancer screening at one of four hospital sites, with non-responders re-invited after 4 months. Individuals were excluded if they had dementia or metastatic cancer, were receiving palliative care or were housebound, or declined research participation. The proportion of individuals invited who responded to the lung health check invitation by telephone was used to measure uptake. We used univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses to estimate associations between uptake of a lung health check invitation and re-invitation of non-responders, adjusted for sex, age, ethnicity, smoking, and deprivation score. This study was registered prospectively with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03934866.

FINDINGS

Between March 20 and Dec 12, 2019, the records of 2 333 488 individuals from 251 primary care practices across northeast and north-central London were screened for eligibility; 1 974 919 (84·6%) individuals were outside the eligible age range, 7578 (2·1%) had pre-existing medical conditions, and 11 962 (3·3%) had opted out of particpation in research and thus were not invited. 95 297 individuals were eligible for invitation, of whom 29 545 (31·0%) responded. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, re-invitation letters were sent to only a subsample of 4594 non-responders, of whom 642 (14·0%) responded. Overall, uptake was lower among men than among women (odds ratio [OR] 0·91 [95% CI 0·88-0·94]; p<0·0001), and higher among older age groups (1·48 [1·42-1·54] among those aged 65-69 years vs those aged 55-59 years; p<0·0001), groups with less deprivation (1·89 [1·76-2·04] for the most vs the least deprived areas; p<0·0001), individuals of Asian ethnicity (1·14 [1·09-1·20] vs White ethnicity; p<0·0001), and individuals who were former smokers (1·89 [1·83-1·95] vs current smokers; p<0·0001). When ethnicity was subdivided into 16 groups, uptake was lower among individuals of other White ethnicity than among those with White British ethnicity (0·86 [0·83-0·90]), whereas uptake was higher among Chinese, Indian, and other Asian ethnicities than among those with White British ethnicity (1·33 [1·13-1·56] for Chinese ethnicity; 1·29 [1·19-1·40] for Indian ethnicity; and 1·19 [1·08-1·31] for other Asian ethnicity).

INTERPRETATION

Inviting eligible adults for lung health checks in areas of socioeconomic and ethnic diversity should achieve favourable participation in lung cancer screening overall, but inequalities by smoking, deprivation, and ethnicity persist. Reminder and re-invitation strategies should be used to increase uptake and the equity of response.

FUNDING

GRAIL.

摘要

背景

低剂量 CT 肺癌筛查可降低肺癌死亡率,但筛查需要在高危肺癌的种族和社会经济群体中实现公平参与,这些群体在临床研究中代表性不足。我们旨在评估在一个种族和社会经济多样化、肺癌高危的队列中,对提供低剂量 CT 肺癌筛查的肺部健康检查邀请的接受程度。

方法

在这项多中心、前瞻性、纵向队列研究(SUMMIT)中,通过英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)英格兰的初级保健记录,在英国伦敦东北部和中北部的实践中,使用电子搜索,识别出过去 20 年中有吸烟史的 55-77 岁的个体。通过信函邀请符合条件的个体参加一项提供肺癌筛查的肺部健康检查,在四家医院中的一家进行,对未回复者在 4 个月后再次邀请。如果个体患有痴呆症或转移性癌症、正在接受姑息治疗或行动不便,或拒绝参与研究,则将其排除在外。通过电话回复肺部健康检查邀请的个体比例来衡量接受程度。我们使用单变量和多变量逻辑回归分析来估计接受肺部健康检查邀请和再次邀请未回复者之间的关联,调整性别、年龄、种族、吸烟和贫困评分。本研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上进行了前瞻性注册,NCT03934866。

结果

在 2019 年 3 月 20 日至 12 月 12 日期间,筛查了来自伦敦东北部和中北部 251 家初级保健实践的 2333488 名个体的记录,以确定其是否符合条件;1974919 名(84.6%)个体年龄不在合格范围内,7578 名(2.1%)患有先前存在的疾病,11962 名(3.3%)选择不参与研究,因此未被邀请。95297 名个体有资格被邀请,其中 29545 名(31.0%)做出了回应。由于 COVID-19 大流行,仅向 4594 名未回复者中的一部分发送了重新邀请信,其中 642 名(14.0%)做出了回应。总体而言,男性的参与率低于女性(比值比[OR]0.91[95%置信区间 0.88-0.94];p<0.0001),年龄较大的群体(65-69 岁组的 1.48[1.42-1.54]与 55-59 岁组相比;p<0.0001)、贫困程度较低的群体(最贫困与最不贫困地区的 1.89[1.76-2.04];p<0.0001)、亚洲种族的个体(1.14[1.09-1.20]与白人种族;p<0.0001)和曾经吸烟者(1.89[1.83-1.95]与当前吸烟者;p<0.0001)的参与率更高。当种族细分为 16 个群体时,与具有英国白人种族的个体相比,其他白人种族的个体的参与率较低(0.86[0.83-0.90]),而与英国白人种族的个体相比,中国、印度和其他亚洲种族的个体的参与率更高(中国种族的 1.33[1.13-1.56];印度种族的 1.29[1.19-1.40];以及其他亚洲种族的 1.19[1.08-1.31])。

解释

在社会经济和种族多样化的地区邀请符合条件的成年人进行肺部健康检查,总体上应该能够实现肺癌筛查的有利参与,但吸烟、贫困和种族方面的不平等仍然存在。应使用提醒和重新邀请策略来提高参与度和回应的公平性。

资金

GRAIL。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6011/10630700/8c02fb7ba409/gr1.jpg

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验