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Improving Lung Cancer Screening Selection: A Comparative Analysis of Risk Models and Traditional Criteria in a Western European General Population

  • Danrong Zhong
  • , Grigory Sidorenkov
  • , Marcel J.W. Greuter
  • , Colin Jacobs
  • , Pim A. de Jong
  • , Hester A. Gietema
  • , Harry J.M. Groen
  • , Firdaus A.A. Mohamed Hoesein
  • , Noa Antonissen
  • , Ralph Stadhouders
  • , Harriet L. Lancaster
  • , Marjolein A. Heuvelmans
  • , Rozemarijn Vliegenthart
  • , Geertruida H. de Bock*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background/Objectives: The objective of this study is to evaluate the performance of the traditional age/smoking criteria and existing risk prediction models in selecting high-risk populations for lung cancer screening from a Western European general population. Methods: Baseline data from the Dutch population-based Lifelines cohort, collected between 2006 and 2013, were linked to the Dutch cancer registry to confirm lung cancer diagnoses. Five-year lung cancer risk was estimated based on traditional age/smoking criteria (NLST, NELSON, SPSTF-2021) and risk prediction models (LLPv2, PLCOm2012, Hoggart, Bach and Shanghai-LCM). For every strategy, the number of individuals eligible was determined, and total lung cancer cases in the eligible groups versus the ineligible groups were calculated. Results: Among 139,120 participants (aged ≥18 years), 218 (0.2%) developed lung cancer within five years. Age/smoking criteria identified 2161–6295 (1.6–4.5%) participants as eligible, comprising 62–92 (28.4–42.2%) lung cancer cases. Risk prediction models identified 2372–4315 (1.7–3.1%) participants as eligible, comprising 40–85 (18.4–38.9%) lung cancer cases. Among lung cancers in ineligible groups, 46.2–59.6% occurred in individuals who formerly smoked, and 28.7–39.3% occurred in individuals who currently smoke. Additionally, 41.2–70.0% of lung cancer cases in ineligible groups were in individuals younger than 50, and 44.3–72.3% in individuals who had quit smoking > 15 years prior to diagnosis. Conclusions: In a Western European population, current lung cancer screening selection criteria resulted in identifying only 18–42% of lung cancer cases. Cases in ineligible groups predominantly concern individuals who currently smoke and are below the threshold age and individuals who quit smoking > 15 years ago, highlighting the opportunity for more personalized risk-based screening strategies to increase lung cancer detection.

Original languageEnglish
Article number724
Number of pages14
JournalCancers
Volume18
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Feb 2026

Keywords

  • general population
  • lung cancer
  • risk prediction model
  • screening
  • selection criteria

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