Lung Cancer Screening: A Clinician’s Checklist

Date Added: 
October 22, 2018
Publisher: 
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Publication Date: 
March 1, 2016
Issue: 
16
Type: 
Clinical Decision Aids
Format: 
Web Page

RPR Commentary

This is a checklist for use when helping smokers decide whether to be screened for lung cancer with low-dose CT.

Abstract

This checklist was developed to help clinicians meet the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) criteria for a lung cancer screening counseling and shared decisionmaking visit. All of the criteria listed below must be met for the screening to be covered as a preventive service benefit under Medicare.

Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduces mortality from lung cancer. There are also potential harms associated with lung cancer screening, including a high-false positive rate and the associated need for diagnostic followup, known and unknown risks of additional testing associated with incidental findings, cumulative radiation exposure, and overdiagnosis. Shared decisionmaking is a collaborative patient-centered process in which patients and clinicians make decisions together, within the context of the best evidence and recommendations and based on the patient’s values and preferences.

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