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Title: Lung Cancer: A Conference for Health Care Professionals


1
The Irish Cancer Society welcomes you
to
Lung Cancer A Conference for Health Care
Professionals
Thursday 29th March 2007 Stillorgan Park Hotel,
Co. Dublin
Kindly supported by
2
John McCormack
Chief ExecutiveIrish Cancer Society
3
Dr. John Kennedy
Consultant Medical Oncologist, St. Jamess
Hospital, Dublin Medical Committee
Chairman,Irish Cancer Society
4
Prof. Des Carney
Consultant Medical Oncologist, Mater
Misericordiae Hospital and St. Lukes Hospital,
Dublin
5
Lung Cancer Is there a Role for Screening High
Risk Patients?
  • Frank Sullivan, MB MRCPI
  • Consultant Radiation Oncologist, University
    College Hospital Galway
  • Irish Cancer Society
  • March 2007

6
Quality of life indicator
  • Dublin Airport to Stillorgan
  • Taxi travel time 1 hr. 45 mins
  • Cost 74.40 euro
  • Galway to Dublin
  • Aer Arann travel time 30 mins
  • Cost 44 euro

7
  • Where does Lung Cancer fit on our screening
    horizon in Ireland?

8
  • Established 01 January 2007
  • SI 632 of 2006

9
  • Rationale for Establishment of NCSS
  • Successful governance model of BreastCheck.
  • Clinical and Other success of BreastCheck.
  • Desire to have specific governance mechanism for
    all screening programmes.
  • Need to avoid duplication.
  • Cost efficiency.
  • Sharing of expertise.

10
  • SI 632 of 2006
  • A) Carry Out the Following
  • Programme for the early diagnosis of breast
    cancer, and arrange primary treatment.
  • Programme for the early diagnosis of cervical
    cancer, and arrange primary treatment.

11
  • SI 632 of 2006
  • B) Advise the Minister on the Following
  • Health technologies, including vaccines, relating
    to cervical cancer.
  • Carrying out Programmes concerning any cancer.

12
  • SI 632 of 2006
  • C) Implement special measures to promote
    participation in its Programmes by disadvantaged
    persons.

13
BreastCheck
  • Historical
  • Steering Group and Quality Assurance Committee
    established 1997.
  • National Breast Screening Board established 1998.
  • Screening commenced February 2000.
  • 2005 National Breast Screening Board was
    re-established.

14
  • Historical
  • Blue Book 1996.
  • Established as a pilot in Mid West in 2000.
  • Part of Public Health Department, Mid Western
    Health Board.
  • Roll out part of HEBE (2003).
  • January 2005 became part of Population Health
    Directorate , HSE.
  • Decision to include programme in NCSSB June 2006.

15
  • Ministerial Policy Letter Received
  • February 2007

16
  • Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine
  • I would be grateful for your Boards advice on
    the role of the HPV vaccines in the prevention
    and control of cervical cancer. Such advice
    should include a detailed assessment of the
    priority to be given to such a vaccine, the
    implications for the screening programme,
    relative clinical and cost effectiveness for the
    different age groups. The National Immunisation
    Advisory Committee is examining the public health
    benefit and appropriate use of the vaccine. My
    Department will make this advice available to the
    Board as soon as it is to hand.

17
  • - Colorectal Screening
  • I would also be grateful for your Boards advice
    on the development of a population based
    colorectal screening programme and a screening
    programme for high risk groups. Such advice
    should include an evaluation of options, clinical
    and cost effectiveness including an effective,
    well organised and quality assured treatment
    service. You should ensure that your advice is
    developed and insofar as is possible agreed with
    the Health Service Executive.

18
  • -Prostate
  • -Lung
  • -Other
  • so far, no plans

19
Overview of any screening program
  • Objective to reduce mortality and/or morbidity?
  • Need for careful evaluation (ethical, financial,
    as well as medical)
  • Differing recommendations for populations vs
    individuals
  • Differing burdons of responsibility

20
Criteria of Jungner Wilson 1968
  • Relatively common disease
  • Seriously disabling
  • Identifiable preclinical phase
  • Understanding of the natural history
  • Recognised acceptable treatment available
  • Facilities for treatment available

21
Criteria for screening test
  • Simple, quick
  • Inexpensive
  • Acceptable to population
  • Accurate
  • Repeatable
  • Sensitive Specific
  • Available

22
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25
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26
The mixed message
  • Help us to dx your cancer earlier
  • Better prognosis, higher cure rates
  • Less invasive and toxic treatments
  • Better outcomes
  • Detection before symptoms/the earliest possible
    pick up point
  • Screen for breast (yes)
  • Screen for cervix (yes)
  • Screen for prostate (no)
  • Screen for lung(hell no!)
  • or anything else for
    that matter

27
The problem
  • Application of different standards to different
    diseases
  • Studies non uniform, at differing stages of
    maturity
  • Do we have to have a reduction in mortality
    before we recommend screening?
  • Is a reduction in morbidity not a sufficient goal
    where mature mortality reduction data is not
    available?

28
Prevention and screening
  • Lets not mix these up!
  • Both are important
  • Complimentary programs targetting healthy but
    distinct populations
  • Importance of smoking cessation programs with any
    lung screening program
  • Importance of vaccination with cervical screening

29
CT SCREENING FOR LUNG CANCER The International
Early Lung Cancer Action Program

30
I-ELCAP MISSION
  • Diagnostic mission
  • Screening for a cancer is pursuit of the cancers
    early diagnosis (before symptoms and signs).
  • Prognostic mission
  • Determine the proportion of early-diagnosed cases
    that are cured by prompt treatment as compared to
    those with delayed or no treatment

31
THE CRITICAL QUESTIONS Diagnostic performance
  • Screening for a cancer is pursuit of the cancers
    early diagnosis (before symptoms and signs).
  • How often does screening lead to a diagnosis of
    cancer?
  • Among these, what proportion are Stage I?
  • All that is needed to answer these questions
    are people at high risk of the disease who are
    diagnosed by the screening

Clinical Imaging 1994 18 16-20 and Chapter in
Progress in Oncology 2002 (eds. VT DeVita, S
Hellman, SA Rosenberg) Jones and Bartlett, Boston
MA. 2002 90-101
32
IDEAL DESIGN FOR DX
Diagnostic Mission
Lung Cancer Distribution (Stage/Size)
!
  • Everyone
  • Screened

Two years baseline and annual repeat
  • When comparing 2 diagnostic tests, use both and
    compare
  • Lung cancer Lancet 1999 354 99-195
  • PIOPED NEJM 2006
  • Digital mammography

33
THE CRITICAL QUESTIONS Prognostic performance
  • Determine the proportion of early-diagnosed cases
    that are cured by prompt treatment
  • Are these screen-diagnosed cancers genuine?
  • Would they lead to death in the absence of
    treatment?
  • How curable are these genuine cancers?

Clinical Imaging 1994 18 16-20 and Chapter in
Progress in Oncology 2002 (eds. VT DeVita, S
Hellman, SA Rosenberg) Jones and Bartlett, Boston
MA. 2002 90-101
34
IDEAL EVALUATION
  • Diagnostic Mission
  • Perform screening to diagnose lung cancer
  • When comparing 2 diagnostic tests, use both and
    compare the two tests (see Lancet 1999 354
    99-195)
  • Prognostic Mission
  • This is where the control group belongs
  • Randomize people who were diagnosed with early
    lung cancer into immediate or delayed treatment
    to learn about
  • the natural course of lung cancer
  • the curability of different subtypes

35
IDEAL EVALUATIONDx of lung cancer followed by RCT
Diagnostic Mission
Prognostic Mission
!
Rx
Deaths
Lung Cancer Distribution (Stage/Size)
  • Everyone
  • Screened

Rx later
Deaths
Two years baseline and 1 annual
specific to stage and size
36
Randomized Stage I RCT
  • Cannot be performed based on knowledge
    accumulated for the past 30 years
  • (Imagine randomizing screen detected beast
    cancers to no treatment)
  • Buell (1971) reported a 10-year survival rate of
    80 for lung cancers lt 20 mm in diameter
  • Martini et al. (1995) reported a 10-year survival
    rate of 93 for lung cancers lt 10 mm in diameter
  • SEER cases (2001) have 8-year survival rate of
    75 for cancers lt 15 mm in diameter
  • But some subtypes, perhaps it can be performed
  • Alternatively, other approaches for treatment
    comparisons can be used

37
TRADITIONAL COMPROMISEScreening RCT NLST
(ongoing)
Early Diagnosis/ Early Intervention
Deaths
CT Screening
  • Randomize

Symptom Diagnosis/ Late Intervention
Deaths
CXR screening


0 Time
(years) 10
13

38
TRADITIONAL COMPROMISEScreening RCT Imagine
this was Breast Cancer
Early Diagnosis/ Early Intervention
Deaths
Mammogram
  • Randomize

Symptom Diagnosis/ Late Intervention
Deaths
Nothing


0 Time
(years) 10
13

39
Problems of Randomized Screening Trials
  • Requires many rounds of screening before effect
    can be seen
  • Typically 10 years of screening
  • Very costly
  • Requires many participants because only a few
    will develop the disease
  • Need to follow everyone in each cohort
  • Problems in the primary outcome measure
  • Retrospective ascertainment of deaths
  • Problems due to differential ascertainment of
    deaths
  • Use of cumulative deaths without consideration of
    which deaths are affected by the screening

40
Problems of Randomized Screening Trials
  • Lack of protocol adherence contamination
  • Requires everyone to stay in the trial in their
    respective arms over a long period of time
  • Typically lacks an optimal regimen
  • Nelson and ACRIN worked hard to change this
    culture, but the PLCO arm still does not
  • All these problems have been documented in prior
    lung and breast cancer screening trial

41
THE ELCAP APPROACHDx, then compare prompt
treatment with alternatives
Diagnostic Mission
Prognostic Mission
!
Rx
Deaths
  • Everyone
  • Screened

Lung Cancer Distribution (Stage/Size)
No Rx or Delay in Rx
Baseline and annual repeat 0
years 2


Deaths
specific to stage and size
Clinical Imaging 199418 16-20
42
ELCAP Diagnostic Results
  • Developed a regimen for screening
  • Showed that the proportion of lung cancer
    identified in Stage I was 85
  • Also showed that CXR missed 83 of those in Stage
    I

Lancet 1999 354 99 - 105
43
ELCAP Prognostic Projections
  • Based on the diagnostic distribution of cancers
    achieved in ELCAP and cure rates from prior
    publications
  • It was estimated that the proportion of deaths
    that could be prevented is conservatively 60,
    but likely to be as high as 80

Lancet 1999 354 page 103
44
International Conferences on Screening for Lung
Cancer
  • The demand resulting from the Lancet publication
    led us to start the Conferences
  • 1st in October 1999 15th in October 2006
  • The Conferences led to the formation of I-ELCAP
  • The I-ELCAP protocol was developed, unanimously
    adopted, and then published (Lung Cancer 2002
    35 143-148)
  • The protocol has been regularly updated and
    posted on the I-ELCAP website (www.IELCAP.org)

45
I-ELCAP Enrollment
Second hand smoke exposure Family history
NEJM 2006 355 1763-71
46
I-ELCAPRegimen of screening
  • Baseline 13 have a positive result on the
    initial CT
  • Repeat 5 have a positive result on the
    initial CT
  • Biopsy when recommended by protocol results in
    92 of diagnoses being malignant


I-ELCAP Protocol is on www.IELCAP.org NEJM 2006
355 1763-71
47
Figure 1. Lung cancer diagnoses resulting from
baseline and annual repeat CT screening
Baseline Screenings N 31,567
Annual Repeat Screenings N 27,456
Enrollment (see Table 1)
Positive result At least 1 solid or part-solid
nodule gt 5 mm in diameter or at least 1
nonsolid gt 8 mm in diameter N 4,186
No nodules or Having nodules not qualifying as a
positive result N 27,381
Positive result any newly identified
non-calcified nodule N 1,460
No newly identified non-calcified nodules N
25,996
Symptom- prompted work-up within 12 months
I-ELCAP annual repeat management algorithm
Symptom-prompted work-up within 12 months
I-ELCAP baseline management algorithm
All baseline cases of lung cancer N 405
All annual repeat cases of lung cancer N 74
All interim diagnoses of lung cancer N 5
All interim diagnoses of lung cancer N 0
All cases of lung cancer N 484
Clinical Stage I cases of lung cancer N 412
48
I-ELCAP Diagnostic Performance
  • Outcome performance, per diagnostic distribution
  • Proportion of diagnoses in Stage I (clinical)
  • in baseline, 85 (348/410)
  • in repeat cycles, 86 (64/74)
  • Stage I cases
  • all confirmed as cancers by expert pathology
    panel 95 already invasive.
  • The eight that were not treated were, without
    exception, fatal within 5 years.

NEJM 2006 355 1763-71
49
I-ELCAP Diagnostic Performance
Diagnostic Mission Prognostic
Mission
!
Rx
Deaths
Stage I lung cancer in 85 of diagnoses
  • Everyone
  • screened

specific to stage and size
No Rx or Delay in Rx

Deaths
Baseline and annual repeat screenings
50
10-year Kaplan-Meier survival
Resected clinical Stage I 92 (95 CI 88-95)
All cases 80 (95 CI 74-85)
All cases 484 431
354 279 181 90 50
28 16
9 2 Resected Stage I 300
279 241 191
119 59 34 18
12 7
1
No. at risk
51
I-ELCAP Prognostic Performance
Diagnostic Mission Prognostic
Mission
!
Rx
10-year survival rate of 92
Stage I lung cancer in 85 of diagnoses
  • Everyone
  • screened

All died within 5 yrs
No Rx

Baseline and annual repeat screenings
52
I-ELCAPProportion of Deaths Prevented
It is estimated by the overall rate of 80 or
of Stage I x cure rate in Stage I 85 x 92
78
Currently in US 5 95 of people with lung
cancer die of it (164,000/173,000, ACS
statistics)
NEJM 2006 355 1763-71
53
CT Screening
  • Can save more lives than PAP smear, mammography
    and colonoscopy screening combined

54
Comparison with mammography Quality Determinants
of Mammography Guideline Panelfor people 40
years and older
  • Baseline cancer detection rate of 0.6 - 1.0
  • Annual cancer detection rate of 0.2 - 0.4
  • compared to CT screening for lung cancer
  • Baseline CT cancer detection rate of 1.3
  • Annual CT cancer detection rate of 0.3

NEJM 2006 355 1763-71
55
CT screening for lung cancer Different risk
criteria
  • CT screening for lung cancer in 40 year old
    smokers, former smokers, and never smokers
  • Baseline cancer detection rate of 1.3
  • Annual cancer detection rate of 0.3
  • CT screening for lung cancer in 60 year old
    smokers and former smokers
  • Baseline CT cancer detection rate of 2.7
  • Annual CT cancer detection rate of 0.6
  • Twice the number of cancers as in 40 year-olds

NEJM 2006 355 1763-71
56
SUMMARYCT Screening for lung cancer
  • The debate about the results of the RCTs
    performed for mammography screening led to
    congressional hearing on February 28, 2002 at
    which key representatives from NCI and ACS
    testified that
  • Screening mammography is justified because it
    finds the cancer earlier and
  • Treatment is better for earlier cancer
  • For lung cancer, we have shown
  • It can be found early no one disagrees
  • Treatment of early stage lung cancer is better
    no one disagrees
  • NCI and ACS also testified that the Cornell Group
    had identified flaws in the studies (Miettinen et
    al. Lancet 2002 359 404-5)

57
Criticisms typically raised
  • Lead time bias
  • Occurs when comparing the effectiveness of a
    treatment having lead time with a treatment
    without lead time.
  • We did not do this.

NEJM 2007 356743-747
58
Criticisms typically raised
  • We do have a comparison group
  • The comparison group are early screen-diagnosed
    lung cancers whose treatment is delayed until
    symptoms occur or who are untreated
  • Important to determine when these deaths occurred

NEJM 2007 356743-747
59
Criticisms typically raised
  • Overdiagnosis bias
  • Assess growth before biopsy
  • All were found to be genuine lung cances by the
    expert pulmonary pathologists
  • All who received no treatment died within 5 years
    of diagnosis

NEJM 2007 356743-747
60
Criticisms typically raised
  • False positives
  • We have shown that the workup can be kept
    reasonably low at about the same rate as
    mammography
  • Following protocol recommendations, unnecessary
    biopsies are kept at a minimum (92 rate)
  • Much lower than the 50 malignancy rate
    recommended for breast biopsies

61
Criticisms typically raised
  • Too many operations for cancers that are not
    fatal
  • Expert pathologic review of the resected
    specimens found them to be genuine cancers.
  • Invasion was identified in 95
  • All those not treated died of their disease
  • Radiation dose
  • The dose of a low-dose CT is about that of a
    mammogram and both are less than the average
    background radiation of a person living in the US
  • Mammogram dose equivalent to travelling 100
    miles by air or 10 miles by car, or smoking .1
    cigarette, or existing for 3 mins at age 60 yrs.

62
Criticisms typically raised
  • Cost to society is too high
  • This screening would cost no more than other
    accepted screening such as mammography and much
    less than colonoscopy.
  • Cost of early stage treatment is about ½ of late
    stage treatment and therefore finding cancers
    early will save money in addition to saving
    lives.
  • Perhaps the cost of not providing the screening
    is too high

63
Bach et al. JAMA 2007 297953-961
  • Computed Tomography Screening
  • and Lung Cancer Outcomes
  • Peter B. Bach, MD, MAPP
  • James R. Jett, MD
  • Ugo Pastorino, MD
  • Melvyn S. Tockman, MD, PhD
  • Stephen J. Swensen, MD, MMM
  • Colin B. Begg, PhD

64
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65
Summary
  • Screening under aegis of NCSS
  • Breast
  • Cervix
  • ? Colorectal
  • No plan for Lung
  • No randomized trial showing reduction in
    mortality for lung
  • NLST trial ongoing (CT vs CXR)
  • I-ELCAP showed that screening saves lives
  • up to 80 curability rate
  • 92 10 yr actuarial survival with resected screen
    detected lung cancers

66
Remember the Criteria of Jungner Wilson
1968and lung cancer
  • Is Lung Cancer?
  • A relatively common disease
  • Seriously disabling
  • Does it have an identifiable preclinical phase
  • Do we have an understanding of the natural
    history
  • Do we have a recognised acceptable treatment
    available
  • Are facilities for treatment available

67
Criteria for screening test
  • Are CT lung scans?
  • Simple, quick
  • Inexpensive (see mammogram)
  • Acceptable to population
  • Accurate
  • Repeatable
  • Sensitive Specific
  • Available

68
Summary
  • Lung cancer kills more than breast prostate,
    colorectal, lymphoma, gynaecologic tumors,
    thyroidcombined!
  • SEER data USA
  • Can we afford not to engage in dialogue around
    screening for lung cancer?

69
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70
The Irish Cancer Society welcomes you
to
Lung Cancer A Conference for Health Care
Professionals
Thursday 29th March 2007 Stillorgan Park Hotel,
Co. Dublin
Kindly supported by
71
Lung Cancer Early Detection, Referral and
Diagnosis
  • Finbarr OConnell

72
Figure 1 Lung Cancer Care Pathway
73
0
25
50
75
Age
74
Figure 1 Lung Cancer Care Pathway
75
Referral and Diagnosis
  • Referral
  • early
  • high suspicion, low threshold
  • open access
  • Diagnosis and Staging
  • efficient
  • multidisciplinary team

76
Referral and Diagnosis
  • Referral
  • early
  • low threshold, high suspicion
  • open access
  • Diagnosis and Staging
  • efficient
  • multidisciplinary team

77
Lung Cancer organisation of services
  • early referral
  • rapid access
  • efficient diagnosis and staging
  • multidisciplinary assessment
  • thoracotomy rates 10 ? gt20
  • improved survival
  • Laroche et al Thorax 53, 445-9

78
Figure 1 Lung Cancer Care Pathway
79
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80
Aims of the Guidelines
  • to raise awareness of lung cancer among health
    care professionals, health care providers,
    patients and the general public
  • to assist in the provision to all patients of
    rapid access to high quality multidisciplinary
    lung cancer care

81
Indications for Urgent Chest X-ray smokers
  • Symptoms
  • Haemoptysis
  • New onset unexplained cough or alteration in
    character/severity of chronic cough
  • Unexplained chest pain or dyspnoea
  • Unexplained weight loss/cachexia
  • Unexplained bone pain/neurological symptoms
  • Signs
  • Clubbing
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Focal chest signs
  • Hepatomegaly

82
GP Referral Guidelines
  • range of cancers including lung
  • guidelines for referral to cancer teams
  • key information about the cancer
  • contact details of cancer specialists/MDT members
  • mechanisms of referral
  • due for launch May 2007
  • Eileen Nolan, Regional Oncology Guidelines
    Officer

83
Figure 1 Lung Cancer Care Pathway
84
Lung CancerManagement
  • Tissue diagnosis
  • Clinical stage
  • Performance status, co-morbidity and weight loss
  • Pulmonary function (particularly where surgery or
    aggressive chemo/RT under consideration)

85
Initial Assessment at Respiratory/Medical OPD
  • Full clinical evaluation including specific
    assessment of -
  • performance status/general medical condition
  • co-morbidity
  • weight loss
  • bone pain
  • hoarseness
  • superior mediastinal obstruction (superior vena
    cava syndrome)
  • neurological symptoms, brachial neuritis,
    Horners syndrome
  • lymphadenopathy, especially cervical
  • skin nodules
  • hepatomegaly
  • paraneoplastic syndromes (Table 7)
  • Review CXR film
  • ECG
  • Blood tests
  • FBC
  • Coagulation screen
  • biochemistry (renal, liver and bone)
  • Pulmonary function tests (if available)

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89
Case 7
90
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • CT prior to bronchoscopy
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology

91
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • CT prior to bronchoscopy
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology

92
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93
Case 6 PET scan
94
Case 5 NSCLC
  • 69 yo female smoker
  • haemoptysis
  • no abnormal signs
  • bronchoscopy ? tumour apical RLL
  • CT ? no obvious mediastinal glands
  • PET/CT ? N2 disease

95
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96
Case 5 NSCLC
  • T2N2M0 IIIA

97
Case 5 NSCLC
  • T2N2M0 IIIA
  • mediastinoscopy
  • surgery if N2 negative
  • chemoRT if N2 positive
  • PET may be false ve or false -ve

98
PET negative mediastinum pStage T2N2M0 IIIA
99
CT/PET ve mediastinum pStage T2N0M0 IB
100
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101
Mediastinoscopy
  • to confirm N2 disease demonstrated on CT, PET,
    PET/CT
  • consider in patients with N1 disease
  • patients with demonstrable N1 disease on CT/PET
    often have microscopic N2 disease

102
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • CT prior to bronchoscopy
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology

103
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104
TBNA
105
Role of Cytology on Site in Peripheral TBNA
p 0.003
106
TBNA for peripheral lesions
BAL/Washings
TBBx
TBNA Positive in 42/56 (76.8) Only positive
procedure in 12/56 (21.4)
TBNA
N56
107
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology

108
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology

109
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110
Mediastinal staging EBUS TBNA
111
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115
Mediastinal sampling by TBNA
  • blind EBUS
  • sensitivity 66 90
  • false ve rate 33 10

116
Advances in diagnosis and staging
  • PET and PET/CT
  • Bronchoscopy
  • peripheral lesions
  • fluoroscopy and TBNA
  • Superdimension
  • mediastinal staging
  • TBNA
  • EBUS
  • on-the-spot cytology
  • Mediastinoscopy

117
Figure 1 Lung Cancer Care Pathway
118
Referral and Diagnosis
  • Referral
  • early
  • high suspicion, low threshold
  • open access
  • Diagnosis and Staging
  • efficient
  • multidisciplinary team

119
Lung CancerMDT
  • respiratory physicians
  • radiologists
  • cytohistopathologists
  • cardiothoracic surgeons
  • medical oncologists
  • radiation oncologists
  • palliative care
  • oncology nurse coordinator
  • clinical nurse specialists
  • data manager
  • MDT coordinator
  • research team

120
0
25
50
75
Age
121
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122
The Irish Cancer Society welcomes you
to
Lung Cancer A Conference for Health Care
Professionals
Thursday 29th March 2007 Stillorgan Park Hotel,
Co. Dublin
Kindly supported by
123
Progress in Tobacco Control
  • Irish Cancer Society Inaugural Lung Cancer
    Conference for Healthcare Professionals
  • 29th March 07Norma Cronin

124
Prevalence of Smoking
Yes 24.68
No 75.32
  • 7 Decrease since 1998

12 month period ending Dec 06 Source Office of
Tobacco Control, March 07
125
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128
Cigarette Smoking By Social Class
12 month period ending December 2006
5.24
27.49
32.81
24.04
10.43
Based on all reported smokers Ref OTC March 07
129
The huge burdenof smoking
  • Smoking is the single largest cause of
    preventable ill health and premature death
  • 6,000 people die every year in Ireland due to
    smoking related diseases
  • 30 of all cancers are caused by smoking
  • 95 of lung cancers are caused by smoking
  • 50 of all smokers will die from tobacco related
    disease

130
Health Consequences of Smoking
  • Cancer - lung - mouth, larynx, throat,
    oesophagus - cervix - bladder - pancreas
  • COPD
  • Coronary heart disease
  • Cerebrovascular disease
  • Peripheral vascular disease
  • Pregnancy and birth complications

131
Tobacco and Cancer
  • Lung Cancer
  • Lung cancer is the leading cause cancer deaths in
    Ireland
  • In Ireland
  • Over 1500 new cases p/a
  • Male 965 and Female 534 - NCRI 1994-2001
  • Over 1450 deaths p/a
  • Risk is associated with dose and duration
  • People who start smoking before 15 have twice as
    many cell mutations as those who started after
    age 20 - (Bonn 1999)

132
Women and Lung Cancer
  • While breast cancer is the leading cause of
    cancer death among women around the world, in a
    growing number of developed countries, lung
    cancer is surpassing breast cancer as the leading
    cause of cancer death
  • Murray, CJL Lopez, AD
  • The global burden of disease, Geneva WHO,1996

133
Cost-Effective Interventions in Tobacco Control
(World Bank 2003)
  • Higher taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco
    products
  • Bans/ Restrictions on smoking in public and
    workplaces
  • Better consumer information
  • Comprehensive bans on advertising and promotion
    of all tobacco products, logos and brand names
  • Large, direct warning labels on cigarette packs
    and other tobacco products
  • Help for smokers who wish to quit, including
    increased access to NRT and other cessation
    therapies

134
The WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
(FCTC)
  • The FCTC is the worlds first public health
    treaty. It commits governments to action to
    protect their citizens from illness and death
    caused by tobacco
  • Came into effect February 2005
  • 168 countries are signatories
  • 140 countries have ratified the treaty.

135
Tobacco ControlScaleJoossens and Raw 2006
136
Taxation of Tobacco Products
  • Excise duty on cigarettes should be substantially
    increased each year above the rate of inflation
  • Evidence shows that the most effective measure
    against smoking is a sharp price increase
  • Ref A Strategy for Cancer Control in Ireland
    2005

137
Why do people smoke - Addiction
  • It is the compulsive use of a drug that has
    psychoactivity and that may be associated with
    tolerance and physical dependence
  • (i.e may be associated with withdrawal symptoms
    after the cessation of drug use)
  • Tobacco addiction is similar to the addition of
    drugs such as heroin and cocaine
  • Surgeon Generals 1988 Report on Nicotine
    Addiction

138
Most Smokers Want to Give Up
Research commissioned by Office of Tobacco
Control and carried out by MRBI in 2002
139
Benefits of Quitting Smoking
Time After Stopping
20 minutes
15years
BP, HR peripheral circulation improve
Risk of stroke back to normal
8 hours
10 years
Nicotine CO levels Fall by 50.
Risk of lung cancer reduced by 50. Risk of MI
back to normal
24 hours
1 year
All Nicotine eliminated Taste smell improved
Risk of MI reduced by 50
3-9 mths
48 hours
Cough wheeze improve
CO normal, mucociliary clearance, risk of MI falls
72 hours
2-12 wks
Breathing easier, bronchospasm relaxes. Energy
improves
Circulation improves
140
Benefits of Quitting
  • Quitting at age 60, 50, 40, or 30 gains,
    respectively, about 3,6,9,or 10 years of life
    expectancy
  • (Doll and Peto 2004)
  • Cessation at age 50 halved the health hazards
    cessation at age 30 avoids almost all the risk
  • (Doll and Peto 2004)

141
Smoking Cessation
  • Smoking Cessation should be an integral part of
    all health professional roles
  • Smoking Cessation is one of the best health
    investments for both the individual and society



142
Who Can Support Smokers?
  • Health care professionals from multi disciplinary
    /multi sectorial backgrounds
  • Consultants
  • General Practitioners
  • Pharmacists
  • Irish Cancer Society
  • National Smokers Quitline
  • HSE Smoking Cessation Counsellors
  • Health Promoting Hospitals Network

143
Smoking Cessation Interventions based on Stages
of Change (Prochaska Di Clemente)
144
Evidence Based Smoking Cessation Interventions
  • Brief opportunistic advice
  • One to One intensive support
  • Group Support (smokers clinic)
  • Self Help materials
  • Quitlines
  • Pharmacotherapy (NRT, Zyban, Champix)

145
Evidence for Brief Intervention
  • Smoking Cessation rates are increased from 1 -
    5 with Brief Intervention from GPs
  • Increased rates of cessation are shown when the
    Doctor uses a Motivational Interviewing approach
    and specific pharmaceutical aids

146
5 As for Brief Intervention
147
National Smokers Quitline
  • 5,971 people called in the first month
  • 18,400 calls prior to the Smoke Free at Work
    legislation between Oct 03 and March 04
  • 47,200 calls to date since the relaunch of the
    National Smokers Quitline
  • (March 07)

148
6 Month Evaluation of Quitline
  • Conducted by Behaviour and Attitudes on behalf of
    Irish Cancer Society and Health Promotion Unit,
    Dept of Health
  • Six months from Nov 03 to Apr 04
  • Almost 7,000 (33) quit
  • 72 has attempted to quit on at least one other
    occasion
  • 64 had been smoking for more than 15 years
  • Average period off cigarettes is around 21 weeks

149
One Year Evaluation
  • 4,350 people (22) had achieved ultimate success
    (had not had a cigarette for one year)
  • 60 of those who quit say the Quitline was either
    a significant or an important aspect of helping
    them stay off.

150
Third anniversary of the ban 29th March 2007
  • 95 compliance with legislation
  • 98 of all workers report that their work
    atmosphere has not been smoky since the
    legislation came into effect
  • 32,000 inspections were completed by the EHOS
  • Source Office of Tobacco Control annual report
    2006

151
Health impacts
All Ireland Bar Study
  • Among non-smokers, cotinine concentrations in the
    saliva declined by 80 in the Republic and 20 in
    Northern Ireland
  • Workrelated exposure to secondhand smoke dropped
    significantly in the Republic but dropped only
    slightly in Northern Ireland
  • A significant drop in the proportion of bar staff
    experiencing respiratory symptoms
  • (Ref BMJ 2005, S.Allwright et al)

152
What Progress Has Been Made?
  • Taxation,CPI
  • Ban tobacco sales to under 18s (2000)
  • Advertising, sponsorship and promotion
  • NRT free to medical card holders (2001)
  • Research Institute for a Tobacco Society (2001)
  • Dedicated smoking cessation specialists
  • National Smokers Quitline (2003)
  • Smoke free at work legislation (2004)
  • Banning of point of sale advertising (2007)
  • Abolition of ten pack cigarettes (31st May 2007)

153
Irish Cancer Society
  • The Irish Cancer Society provide a range of
    services
  • Smoking cessation training for Health care
    professionals
  • Promotion delivery of the National Smokers
    Quitline
  • National Smokers Quitline
  • 1850 201 203

154
Thank youIrish Cancer Societywww.cancer.iewww.o
tc.iewww.hse.iewww.ashireland.ie
155
The Irish Cancer Society welcomes you
to
Lung Cancer A Conference for Health Care
Professionals
Thursday 29th March 2007 Stillorgan Park Hotel,
Co. Dublin
Kindly supported by
156
Dr. Barry OConnell
Consultant Respiratory Physician, St. Jamess
Hospital, Dublin
157
Prof. Cliona OFarrelly
Research Immunologist, Education Research
Centre, St. Vincents University Hospital, Dublin
Chairperson, Cancer Research Ireland
158
The Irish Cancer Society welcomes you
to
Lung Cancer A Conference for Health Care
Professionals
Thursday 29th March 2007 Stillorgan Park Hotel,
Co. Dublin
Kindly supported by
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