LUCADA: a valuable resource but there are questions it cannot answer Tom Treasure, 1 Gunnar Hillerdal, 2 Martin Utley 1 Rich and colleagues have recently provided information on lung cancer in England from the National Lung Cancer Audit database (LUCADA). 1 The authors concluded that LUCADA accurately describes people in England with lung cancer and can be used to drive healthcare improvements. They found that the socioeconomic status of individual patients does not affect survival and has only limited impact on patientsaccess to treatment. The question remained as to whether differences in service, at the level of the NHS Trust, might explain regional variation in outcome. In this issue of Thorax, they explore inequalities in outcomes and how these are inuenced by clinical characteristics of the patients and the features of local cancer services. In the tables, they also show that survival (but not the proportion operated on) differs between various ethnic groups but do not comment further on this nding in the results or discussion sections. The authors conclude that there is an opportunity to increase access to thoracic surgeons for patients who present and are being cared for in non-surgical centres. 2 Access to care should ideally not be dependent on where people live. There is no doubt that historically it has been and the authors quote evidence in support of the point from Scotland, 3 where popula- tion density is low and thoracic units are geographically sparse. In the major cities of England whether patients are seen in a specialist thoracic centre is not deter- mined solely by where they live. Selective routing of patients by general practi- tioners could contribute to the differences in utilisation of surgery reported. The authors have not presented an analysis by geography, although they refer to varia- tion in outcome being anecdotally attrib- uted to geographical differences in patient features. The authorsaccess to the post- code data required to calculate Townsend scores suggests that this analysis could be done. In British practice, there is a consider- able overlap in the service provision for cardiac and thoracic surgery. Core training is in both cardiac and thoracic elements of the specialty and many surgeons continue in consultant practice doing both. For a period in history, coronary artery surgery consumed the time, energy and resources of cardiothoracic units through the 1980s and 1990s. With striking reductions in coronary artery disease in the British Isles 4 almost completely attributable to changes in life style, diet and public health measures, the pendulum may be swinging back to mixed cardiothoracic practice. By the far from perfect measure of perioper- ative mortality, there was no evident difference between the outcomes for solely thoracic and mixed cardiothoracic surgeons 5 but there can be little doubt that while there was a drive to provide equitable access to coronary interventions, provision of lung cancer surgery took something of a back seat. 67 This problem has been addressed and considerable effort has gone into improving organisation of cancer services. No suggestion is made by Rich et al that there are insufcient pairs of surgical hands to provide an appropriate level of lung cancer surgery in both quantity and quality. Specialist services such as surgery and radiotherapy are centralised according to the hub and spoke system referred to in the paper. 2 The analysis seems to show that the system is working for patients and probably strikes an appropriate balance between the conicting pressures of accessibility of surgery and the need for centralisation of facilities and expertise. There may yet be room for improvement in equity of access to thoracic surgery in the UK, but that this would confer a survival advantage cannot be derived from these data. The analysis shows only a small, non-signicant difference in survival (82% vs 79% alive at the date of last data collection in September 2009) depending on whether or not a patient is rst seen in a surgical centre. Patients seen at specialist centres are more likely to have investigations more expeditiously and a denitive tissue diagnosis made earlier. This potential lead-time bias (ie, measured survival being longer simply because of an earlier diagnosis) might be all the differ- ence there is. The observation that tumour doubling times are widely variable as deduced by Geddes from serial chest radiographs 8 has been revisited in the modern era by studying patients in a screening programme who had two or more CT scans at inter- vals. 9 Some of these patients had doubling times of 1000 or more days. The point to remember in interpreting these data is that it takes 10 doubling times to go from the readily seen 1 cm nodule to a lethal cancer load; in some patients, given these doubling times, this would take 30 years. 10 Thus, surgical outcomes for screened patients and chance pick-ups on x-rays, taken for other reasons, are not comparable with cancer survival among cohorts that present with clinical symptoms. With screened detection in asymptomatic patients, the clinical picture and the expectations that are conveyed by the diagnosis of lung cancer are different; the diagnosis is being reframed. 11 Outcomes in a series of patients identied by screening cannot be directly compared with those in whom investiga- tions have been initiated after clinical presentation. It is in the nature of any viable cancer screening study that it will increase the number of cases detected and the number of cases actively managed. Prior to the NLST study, this had not translated into an improvement in survival in lung cancer. 12 The NLST study shows a differ- ence of 62 deaths per 100 000 person-years with CT screening compared with screening with plain chest radiograph. This was at the cost of a higher false positive rate of 96.4% in the low-dose CT group compared with 94.5% in the radiography group. The assumption implicit in the paper by Rich and colleagues, that operating on a higher proportion of patients diagnosed in the modern era with lung cancer will increase the number of those who benet merits caution. When surgeons operated on the basis of a chest x-ray and a bron- choscopy, the 5-year survival was 25%e 27% based on data from six high volume expert surgeons who operated on 9000 1 Clinical Operational Research Unit, Department of Mathematics, University College London, London, UK; 2 Department of Lung Medicine and Allergy, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden Correspondence to Professor Tom Treasure, Department of Mathematics, University College London, Clinical Operational Research Unit, 4 Taviton Street, London WC1, London, UK; tom.treasure@gmail.com Thorax December 2011 Vol 66 No 12 1023 Editorial on November 22, 2021 by guest. Protected by copyright. http://thorax.bmj.com/ Thorax: first published as 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2011-200922 on 13 September 2011. Downloaded from