CHESTGuidelines & Topic CollectionsNavigating the Lung Cancer Screening and Nodule Management Pathway

Navigating the Lung Cancer Screening and Nodule Management Pathway

This interactive infographic—part of CHEST’s Bridging Specialties®: Timely Access to Lung Cancer Screening program—outlines how clinicians can navigate lung cancer screening and nodule management.

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This program is produced in partnership with CHEST and is sponsored by Lilly USA, LLC.

The Lung Cancer Screening Gap | Navigating Current Guidelines | Shared Decision-Making | Nodule Ordering and Management

Urgency and burden: The lung cancer screening gap

124,990

annual deaths (as many as breast, colon, and prostate cancer combined)

#1

cancer killer in the United States

~ 1 in 5

eligible adults screened in 2024 (~ 18.2%), the lowest of all major cancers

63% vs 8%

five-year survival for stage I (localized) vs stage IV (distant)

≥ 20%

reduction in lung cancer mortality with low-dose CT (LDCT) scan vs chest X-ray

≥ 24%

reduction in lung cancer mortality at 10 years in men with LDCT scan

Takeaway: Increasing lung cancer screening saves lives.

Mapping the lung cancer burden, state by state

Explore lung cancer incidence, screening rates, smoking rates, five-year survival rates, and early diagnosis rates across the United States.

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Navigating current guidelines

Guideline evolution—2013 to present

Lung cancer screening eligibility has progressively expanded to improve early detection and reduce disparities. These cards detail the screening criteria across various guidelines over time, which have evolved to expand eligibility to capture previously excluded high-risk patients who are younger and have smoked less.

  • Age 55-80 years
  • ≥ 30 pack-years
  • Quit ≤ 15 years (if formerly smoked)

These recommendations maintained the quit-year limit from the 2013 guidelines.

  • Age 50-80 years
  • ≥ 20 pack-years
  • Quit ≤ 15 years

These guidelines removed the 15-year quit requirement and are the most inclusive.

  • Age 50-80 years
  • ≥ 20 pack-years

These guidelines do not have a quit-year requirement and also remove the upper age limit. These guidelines are favored by oncologists.

  • Age ≥ 50 years
  • Category A: ≥ 20 pack-years
  • Category B: ≥ 20-year smoking history (not pack-years)
a person writing on a tablet with medical icons
a person writing on a tablet with medical icons

Applying current screening criteria

  • Age: ≥ 50 years (no upper limit in NCCN)
  • Smoking exposure: ≥ 20 pack-years (or risk-based criteria)
  • Smoking status: Currently or formerly smoked (no quit-year limit in some guidelines)
  • Additional risk factors: COPD, family history, occupational exposures

Clinical Implication: Use guideline-aligned tools to individualize eligibility and support consistent screening decisions.

High-risk populations

Infographic about high-risk populations for lung cancer screening

Shared decision-making

Shared decision-making (SDM) involves collaborative conversations between clinicians and patients to weigh the benefits vs harms of LDCT scan, guided by the patients’:

  • Values and personal preferences
  • Comorbidities and overall health status
  • Willingness to undergo further diagnosis or treatment if something is found
  • Understanding of false-positive rates and incidental findings

Why is SDM required?

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services requires SDM before the first LDCT scan. Without documented SDM, Medicare will not cover the scan at $0 cost-sharing.

  • USPSTF Grade B + Affordable Care Act §2713: LDCT scan covered at no cost-sharing ONLY after documented SDM
  • Must be done once before the first screen; not required at each annual visit
  • Documentation required: SDM note must appear in the medical record alongside the LDCT scan order
  • Billing: CPT 71271, G0296 | ICD-10 Z87.891 + Z12.2 + F17.210

The five-step SDM framework

STEP 1 – CONFIRM ELIGIBILITY

STEP 2 – DISCUSS BENEFITS

STEP 3 – DISCUSS HARMS

STEP 4 – USE A DECISION AID

STEP 5 – DOCUMENT AND DECIDE

LDCT scan ordering and nodule management

Lung-RADS® and the Fleischner guidelines both help guide follow-up for pulmonary nodules, but they're built for different situations. Here's how they compare.

More about Lung-RADS® Classification » | More about Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm »

Lung-RADS® Classification
Comparison
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm
Lung-RADS® Classification LDCT scan
Used for
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Incidental nodules (found on a CT scan done for another reason)
Lung-RADS® Classification Asymptomatic, high-risk individuals
Patient type
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Any patient with an unexpected nodule
Lung-RADS® Classification Screening programs
Setting
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Routine clinical practice
Lung-RADS® Classification Categories 1–4
Structure
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Size and risk-based recommendations
Lung-RADS® Classification Standardized follow-up intervals
Output
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Flexible follow-up based on risk
Lung-RADS® Classification Early cancer detection
Goal
Fleischner Guidelines Algorithm Avoid overmanagement or undermanagement

Note: Patients with a history of another cancer are not included in Lung-RADS nor Fleischner criteria. For this group, surveillance should be guided by the individual cancer’s surveillance recommendations.

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