Long COVID Respiratory Symptoms Are Creating Delays in Lung Cancer Screening

The symptoms of long COVID are notoriously diverse. In some people, this poorly understood post-viral syndrome affects the brain, while others are beset by cardiovascular, digestive or respiratory issues. Long COVID may also destabilize a person鈥檚 psychological well-being.

Anywhere from 5 to 40 percent of long COVID sufferers experience respiratory symptoms, from not being able to exercise as long as usual to something more severe, such as trouble breathing to a point where they can barely walk a few steps.

These respiratory issues can be hard to quantify on CT scans of the lungs. Even worse, they have been creating delays in screening for lung cancer in patients considered at risk for the disease.

Dr. Bradley Pua, Associate Professor of Radiology, Division Chief of Interventional Radiology and Director of the Lung Cancer Screening Program at 麻豆传媒高清版, explains the complex reasons for these delays and shares some of the latest long COVID research findings. Read on to gain insight into this important topic per his expertise.

How, exactly, are long COVID symptoms creating delays in lung screening?鈥

The COVID-19 vaccines are causing enlarged lymph nodes鈥攁 sign that the immune system is fighting the virus. Enlarged lymph nodes aren鈥檛 clinically significant, Dr. Pua explains, 鈥渂ut they require us to delay a lung screening scan by about a month to make sure we don鈥檛 misinterpret the enlarged nodes on a scan as something more ominous.鈥

That said,鈥 he continues, 鈥a delay of a month for an annual lung scan isn鈥檛 usually a problem.听 The journal articles we鈥檝e seen regarding reduced cancer and lung screening rates during the pandemic haven鈥檛 reported delays in access to care. We鈥檝e continued to screen people at higher-risk. Anecdotally, we鈥檙e seeing more people who are interested in learning about lung screening, presumably because COVID has raised their awareness around the importance of pulmonary health.

What does long COVID look like on a CT scan of the lungs?

鈥淐OVID typically shows up as 鈥榤ultiple ground glass opacities鈥 throughout the lungs. 鈥極pacities鈥 is the term we use in radiology, as these areas look white against a black background on our screens,鈥 Dr. Pua says.听

鈥淲e can partially see through these opacities. They have a pretty characteristic appearance鈥攚e liken them to ground glass鈥攁nd very few things look like them.鈥

Some people with mild symptoms have normal CT scans.鈥But 鈥ground glass opacities鈥 may show up in patients with more severe symptoms, and they can hide more ominous things underneath鈥攎ost notably lung cancer. 鈥淥nce we find them, we continue to give patients CT scans until the opacities resolve.鈥

At present, there is no national guidance on how often or how long to administer scans, he says. 鈥淲e tend to follow established protocols in our lung screening program, which is designed around the best information we have from published academic articles, our own investigations, and conversations with our international colleagues.鈥

What factors contribute to a person鈥檚 lung cancer risk?

  • Smoking
  • Exposure to second-hand smoke
  • Radon
  • Other toxic substances such as asbestos, arsenic, diesel exhaust, and some forms of silica and chromium
  • Personal or family history of lung cancer
  • Radiation therapy to the chest

See more detailed information about risk factors for lung cancer on the CDC鈥檚 website .

Do referrals for screening come from primary care physicians, pulmonologists or both?

Bothespecially if a patient is symptomatic,鈥 he says.鈥淎t 麻豆传媒高清版, we have a robust lung screening and nodule surveillance program. Your PCP or pulmonologist can refer you for screening, or you can self-refer.鈥

Are long COVID-related changes in the lungs related to lung cancer?

Lung cancers may be hiding under the changes we see from long COVID, he says, but it isn鈥檛 clear whether COVID actually causes or contributes to lung cancer. 鈥淲e鈥檝e begun to analyze our experiences treating a related smaller infection from the past: the original SARS infection in 2003. However, the results of follow-up exams with those patients have been mixed where cancer risk is concerned.

鈥淚deally,鈥 he adds, 鈥渨e鈥檇 like to create a program to follow patients with long COVID more formally. We鈥檇 look at changes in their CT scans, using their initial COVID infection as a baseline. Unfortunately鈥攁nd we鈥檙e finding this at other major medical centers as well鈥攁 lack of federal and state support for such endeavors makes such a program difficult to create and maintain. But that won鈥檛 stop us from advocating for it.鈥

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