Screening might avert many lung cancer deaths: study

Cigarette butts in an ashtray in Los Angeles, CaliforniaNEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A calculation based on results from a large lung cancer screening trial projects that 12,000 deaths a year among the highest-risk smokers and ex-smokers in the U.S. could be avoided with a national screening program. The National Lung Screening Trial, published in 2010, found 20 percent fewer deaths from lung cancer in a group of people at highest risk for the disease when they were screened annually with CT scans, a form of high-resolution X-ray that can spot suspicious lung nodules. Based on the 8. …