The Surgical clinics of North America
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The Memorial Sloan-Kettering Lung Cancer Detection Program is described, and data from this study are reported and analyzed. The program enrolled 10,040 cigarette-smoking men who were screened for at least 5 years by annual chest radiographs; half the men randomly selected also had 4-monthly sputum cytologic examinations. Of the 354 lung cancers that developed in these men during the screening period and a 2-year post-screening period, nearly half were adenocarcinomas and nearly one third were epidermoid (or squamous) carcinomas. ⋯ Sputum cytology was most effective in detecting squamous carcinomas early; chest radiographs were most effective for detecting adenocarcinoma. However, sputum cytology did not reduce lung cancer mortality among these men who were in a program of annual chest radiographic examinations. Overall 5-year survival for all of the men who developed lung cancer was 35 per cent, compared with the national average of 13 per cent.