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A comprehensive lung cancer screening program carried out at Veterans Health Administration hospitals was taxing to implement and revealed a large number of patients with results requiring follow-up, though only 1.5% had cancers.

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A comprehensive lung cancer screening program carried out at Veterans Health Administration hospitals was taxing to implement and revealed a large number of patients with results requiring follow-up, though only 1.5% had cancers.

 

A comprehensive lung cancer screening program carried out at Veterans Health Administration hospitals was taxing to implement and revealed a large number of patients with results requiring follow-up, though only 1.5% had cancers.

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FROM JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE

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Key clinical point: Comprehensive lung cancer screening is complex to implement in hospital primary care settings and may trigger resource-intensive follow-up.

Major finding: Of more than 2,000 patients screened, nearly 60% were positive for nodules, though only 1.5% had cancer.

Data source: A pilot study in 4,246 eligible primary care patients at eight Veterans Health Administration hospitals; 2,106 were screened using low-dose computed tomography.

Disclosures: The Veterans Health Administration funded the study. Two of its coauthors reported commercial conflicts of interest; one of those disclosed a grant application to the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation related to lung cancer screening.