(HealthDay News) -- Annual low-dose CT scans cut the death rate from  lung cancer by 20 percent in heavy smokers and formerly heavy smokers,  compared to those who get annual chest X-rays, according to the results  of a major National Cancer Institute study released on Wednesday.
Experts  are calling the findings a major advance in efforts to combat lung  cancer deaths. By catching the cancer early, the tumors can be removed  surgically -- hopefully before they've spread and become very difficult  to cure.
"This is a momentous time in the history of public  health research," said Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer of the  American Cancer Society. "The NLST [National Lung Screening Trial] is  the best-designed and best-performed lung cancer screening study in  history."
Yet the findings raise as many questions as they  answer, said Dr. Harold Sox, a professor emeritus of medicine at  Dartmouth Medical School who wrote an accompanying editorial to the  study published in the June 30 issue of the New England Journal of  Medicine. Read more...
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