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Western Australian cigarette smokers have fewer small lung nodules than North Americans on CT screening for lung cancer
Authors:CP Murray  PM Wong  J Louw  GW Waterer
Institution:1. Department of Interventional and Diagnostic Radiology, Royal Perth Hospital and;2. School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Abstract:To determine the prevalence of small lung nodules on low‐dose helical computed tomography (CT) in a Western Australian cohort of asymptomatic long‐term cigarette smokers and to compare this with a large, similarly derived cohort of North Americans from the Mayo Clinic Lung Cancer Screening Trial. Forty‐nine asymptomatic long‐term cigarette smokers of minimum age 50 years underwent a low‐dose 64‐slice helical CT of the lungs. Images were viewed on a soft copy reporting station with thin section axial and coronal images, maximum intensity projection images, and advanced image manipulation tools. The prevalence of all nodules was 39%, significantly lower than the Mayo Clinic cohort prevalence of 51% (P < 0.01, Fisher's exact test), despite the use of more advanced imaging technology and image manipulation designed to increase the sensitivity for nodules. The prevalence of small nodules in asymptomatic long‐term cigarette smokers in Western Australia is high, though significantly less than that found in a large study in North America. The authors postulate this is due to the relatively low rates of mycobacterium tuberculosis and soil‐derived fungal pulmonary infections in Western Australia, as well as a lower degree of urban air pollution.
Keywords:computed tomography  lung cancer  mass screening
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