Lung cancer continues to be the leading cause of cancer death in the United States. There are several important disparities in lung cancer mortality: racial and ethnic minorities, those with serious mental illness and those with lower socioeconomic status experience higher lung cancer mortality compared to the general population. Lung cancer screening (LCS) with annual low dose chest CT can reduce lung cancer mortality by 20% for high-risk patients, but has been generally underutilized with uptake of 5-15% by eligible patients across the United States. Half of all patients eligible for LCS remain current smokers, and the additional benefits of tobacco cessation services can increase the benefits of LCS clinical encounters in these patients. Despite the proven benefit of LCS and tobacco cessation, it remains out of reach for many with barriers across the patient, provider, and health-care system levels with resultant disparities in uptake of LCS and effective tobacco cessation that may exaggerate disparities in clinical lung cancer early detection and mortality. The majority of LCS care occurs across several visits in an outpatient clinical setting, which may make it inaccessible to the most vulnerable patients. Our central objective is to extend the reach of lung cancer and tobacco screening through the implementation and evaluation of a program extending these services inpatient in a public hospital that serves a known high-risk and diverse population in East Harlem. Preliminary data obtained from a retrospective quality improvement project examined data from patients admitted over a 3 month period in early 2022. Of 1374 unique patients were admitted to our hospital, 112 patients met LCS eligibility criteria and over 80% had no evidence of having been screened. Forty-seven percent identified as Black and 33.9% as Hispanic, groups known to have worse lung cancer outcomes. While smoking data was incomplete on a majority of patients, 75% of all inpatient admissions were noted to be currently smoking. This, our preliminary data suggest that an inpatient program to provide smoking cessation and LCS in a safety-net hospital may be an effective tool to increase the reach of LCS in a known high-risk demographic and address disparities in LCS and tobacco cessation services. This proposal represents a prospective pilot study to develop, implement and evaluate an inpatient LCS and tobacco cessation program.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
These interventions will be facilitated as an inpatient
Active smokers only will received inpatient tobacco cessation counseling/risk reduction
Metropolitan Hospital/ NYCHHC
New York, New York, United States
RECRUITINGup-to-date status on LCS at 3 months of hospital discharge
Up-to-date status is defined as the completion of a low-dose chest CT within 15 months. Estimating equations will also be used to determine the independent association of the intervention with increase in prevalence of up-to-date LCS adjusted for patient demographic features and underlying time-trends.
Time frame: 3 months post hospital discharge
difference in referrals for LCS and completion of smoking cessation/LCS eligibility data
Differences in proportions will be used to compare the prevalence of up-to-date LCS between pre and post period.
Time frame: 6 months
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