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Observational Study
. 2014 Jun;9(6):752-9.
doi: 10.1097/JTO.0000000000000161.

Prospective CT screening for lung cancer in a high-risk population: HIV-positive smokers

Affiliations
Observational Study

Prospective CT screening for lung cancer in a high-risk population: HIV-positive smokers

Alicia Hulbert et al. J Thorac Oncol. 2014 Jun.

Abstract

Background: Epidemiological evidence suggests that HIV-infected individuals are at increased risk of lung cancer, but no data exist because large computed tomography (CT) screening trials routinely exclude HIV-infected participants.

Methods: From 2006 to 2013, we conducted the world's first lung cancer screening trial of 224 HIV-infected current/former smokers to assess the CT detection rates of lung cancer. We also used 130 HIV-infected patients with known lung cancer to determine radiographic markers of lung cancer risk using multivariate analysis.

Results: Median age was 48 years with 34 pack-years smoked. During 678 person-years, one lung cancer was found on incident screening. Besides this lung cancer case, 18 deaths (8%) occurred, but none were cancer related. There were no interim diagnoses of lung or extrapulmonary cancers. None of the pulmonary nodules detected in 48 participants at baseline were diagnosed as cancer by study end. The heterogeneity of emphysema across the entire lung as measured by CT densitometry was significantly higher in HIV-infected subjects with lung cancer compared with the heterogeneity of emphysema in those without HIV (p ≤ 0.01). On multivariate regression analysis, increased age, higher smoking pack-years, low CD4 nadir, and increased heterogeneity of emphysema on quantitative CT imaging were all significantly associated with lung cancer.

Conclusions: Despite a high rate of active smoking among HIV-infected participants, only one lung cancer was detected in 678 patient-years. This was probably because of the young age of participants suggesting that CT screening of high-risk populations should strongly consider advanced age as a critical inclusion criterion. Future screening trials in urban American must also incorporate robust measures to ensure HIV patient compliance, adherence, and smoking cessation.

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Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1
Flow diagram of HIV smokers enrolled in the lung cancer screening study by year of study participation. (Title: Flow-chart of Registered and Enrolled HIV smokers)
Fig 2
Fig 2
Heterogeneity of emphysema of 39 HIV-infected patients with lung cancer and 117 HIV-infected smokers without lung cancer as measured by the variability (standard deviation) in voxel intensities, corrected for lung air volume. The standard deviation was significantly higher in those HIV subjects with lung cancer versus those without lung cancer (p=0.0001).
Fig 3
Fig 3
Inverse correlation between CD4 counts in cells/mm3 and the percentage of voxels with attenuation less than −910HU (corrected for lung air volume) in 38 HIV-infected patients with lung cancer. Only one HIV-infected individual with lung cancer had a CD4 count >400 cells/mm3.

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