Department of Surgery, 6558Temple University Health Systems, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Department of Radiology, 6558Temple University Health Systems, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Cancer Control. 2023 Jan-Dec;30:10732748221121391. doi: 10.1177/10732748221121391.
COVID-19 forced a delay of non-essential health services, including lung cancer screening. Our institution developed a single-encounter, telemedicine (SET) lung cancer screening whereby patients receive low-dose CT in-person, but counseling regarding results, coordination of follow-up care and smoking cessation is delivered using telemedicine. This study compares outcomes of SET lung cancer screening to our pre-COVID, single-visit, in-person (SIP) lung cancer screening.
A retrospective cohort study was performed we recorded independent variables of gender, race/ethnicity, age, educational attainment, smoking status and dependent variables including cancer diagnosis, stage and treatment between March 2019 to July 2021. Using retrospective analysis, we compared outcomes of SIP lung cancer screening before COVID-19 and SET lung cancer screening amid COVID-19.
There was a significant difference in number of patients screened pre- and amid COVID-19.673 people were screened via SIP, while only 440 were screened via SET. SIP screening consisted of 52.5% Black/African American patients, which decreased to 37% with SET lung cancer screening. There was no significant difference in gender, age, or educational attainment. There was also no significant difference in Lung-RADS score between the 2 methods of screening or diagnostic procedures performed. Ultimately telemedicine based screening diagnosed fewer cancers, 1.6% diagnosed via telemedicine vs 3.3% screened by in person.
We implemented SET lung cancer screening to continue lung cancer screening during a global pandemic. Our study established feasibility of telemedicine-based lung cancer screening among our predominantly African American/Black population, though fewer patients were screened. We found no difference in distribution between age, or educational attainment suggesting other factors discouraging lung cancer screening amid COVID-19.
COVID-19 迫使包括肺癌筛查在内的非必要医疗服务推迟。我们机构开发了一种单次接触的远程医疗(SET)肺癌筛查,患者在现场接受低剂量 CT,但有关结果的咨询、后续护理的协调和戒烟则通过远程医疗进行。本研究比较了 SET 肺癌筛查与我们在 COVID-19 之前的单次就诊、现场(SIP)肺癌筛查的结果。
我们进行了一项回顾性队列研究,记录了性别、种族/族裔、年龄、教育程度、吸烟状况等独立变量以及癌症诊断、分期和治疗等依赖变量。通过回顾性分析,我们比较了 COVID-19 之前的 SIP 肺癌筛查和 COVID-19 期间的 SET 肺癌筛查的结果。
COVID-19 前后筛查的患者数量存在显著差异。通过 SIP 筛查了 673 人,而通过 SET 仅筛查了 440 人。SIP 筛查包括 52.5%的黑人和非洲裔美国人患者,而 SET 肺癌筛查则降至 37%。性别、年龄或教育程度没有显著差异。两种筛查方法的 Lung-RADS 评分或进行的诊断程序也没有显著差异。最终,远程医疗筛查诊断出的癌症较少,通过远程医疗诊断出 1.6%,而通过现场筛查诊断出 3.3%。
我们实施了 SET 肺癌筛查,以在全球大流行期间继续进行肺癌筛查。我们的研究确立了远程医疗肺癌筛查在我们以非裔美国人为主的人群中的可行性,尽管筛查的患者较少。我们发现年龄或教育程度之间没有分布差异,这表明 COVID-19 期间其他因素阻碍了肺癌筛查。