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Anyone who has ever smoked is set to be offered a lung check from middle age under a landmark NHS plan to boost cancer survival.
Ministers are poised to back a recommendation from screening chiefs to support the mass rollout of CT scans in mobile units and trucks in supermarket car parks.
Results from pilot schemes have found that three-quarters of lung cancer cases at stage one or two – when it is more likely to be treatable – can be spotted by the checks.
Normally, the majority of cases are found later, when the prognosis is far worse and the treatment is far more involved and costly.
The rollout of lung screening is expected to form part of a series of announcements this year to improve early diagnosis of cancer.
While no formal decision has been taken, Downing Street and the Department of Health and Social Care are understood to be in talks about funding levels for the programme, which would determine the speed of rollout.
The discussions follow recommendations from the UK National Screening Committee (UKNSC), which said all former and current smokers aged between 55 and 74 should be invited to an assessment by a health professional.
Anyone then deemed at high risk of lung cancer would be offered a low-dose CT scan, under the recommendation.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/06/21/nhs-lung-cancer-tests-every-former-smoker-scan/
Ministers are poised to back a recommendation from screening chiefs to support the mass rollout of CT scans in mobile units and trucks in supermarket car parks.
Results from pilot schemes have found that three-quarters of lung cancer cases at stage one or two – when it is more likely to be treatable – can be spotted by the checks.
Normally, the majority of cases are found later, when the prognosis is far worse and the treatment is far more involved and costly.
The rollout of lung screening is expected to form part of a series of announcements this year to improve early diagnosis of cancer.
While no formal decision has been taken, Downing Street and the Department of Health and Social Care are understood to be in talks about funding levels for the programme, which would determine the speed of rollout.
The discussions follow recommendations from the UK National Screening Committee (UKNSC), which said all former and current smokers aged between 55 and 74 should be invited to an assessment by a health professional.
Anyone then deemed at high risk of lung cancer would be offered a low-dose CT scan, under the recommendation.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/06/21/nhs-lung-cancer-tests-every-former-smoker-scan/