Global Lung Cancer Burden Underscores Need for Expanded Low-Dose CT Screening Programs
This Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology overview examines global lung cancer epidemiology, risk factors, and the expanding implementation of low-dose CT screening programs that have demonstrated mortality reduction in large-cohort studies. Incidence patterns reflect geographic variation in tobacco smoking, environmental exposures including biomass fuels and radon, and genetic factors. The review provides important context for the growing role of molecular diagnostics and liquid biopsy in lung cancer early detection alongside imaging-based screening.
The original study
The global burden of lung cancer: current status and future trends.
- Authors
- Leiter A, Veluswamy RR, Wisnivesky JP
- Journal
- Nature reviews. Clinical oncology
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 37479810
Original abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. However, lung cancer incidence and mortality rates differ substantially across the world, reflecting varying patterns of tobacco smoking, exposure to environmental risk factors and genetics. Tobacco smoking is the leading risk factor for lung cancer. Lung cancer incidence largely reflects trends in smoking patterns, which generally vary by sex and economic development. For this reason, tobacco control campaigns are a central part of global strategies designed to reduce lung cancer mortality. Environmental and occupational lung cancer risk factors, such as unprocessed biomass fuels, asbestos, arsenic and radon, can also contribute to lung cancer incidence in certain parts of the world. Over the past decade, large-cohort clinical studies have established that low-dose CT screening reduces lung cancer mortality, largely owing to increased diagnosis and treatment at earlier disease stages. These data have led to recommendations that individuals with a high risk of lung cancer undergo screening in several economically developed countries and increased implementation of screening worldwide. In this Review, we provide an overview of the global epidemiology of lung cancer. Lung cancer risk factors and global risk reduction efforts are also discussed. Finally, we summarize lung cancer screening policies and their implementation worldwide.