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What Is The Early Lung Cancer Action Project? - Dr. Henschke (VIDEO)

By Dr. Claudia Henschke Expert May 21, 2009 - 1:24pm
 
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Dr. Henschke describes the Early Lung Cancer Action Project (ELCAP).

More Videos from Dr. Claudia Henschke 27 videos in this series

Dr. Henschke:

In the early 1990s, for the first time CT scans were available where you could get a, go through the entire chest in a breath hold; that’s in less than 20 seconds. Before that, it would take about half an hour to get a CT scan. So, with that innovation, all of a sudden there were many people with small nodules that were found to have small nodules.

At that point, all of a sudden, many small nodules were being detected, and we were having to discuss how best to work them up. At that point, we thought that we should evaluate CT screening for lung cancer at the same time we answer those questions about what to do with these small nodules, and that’s how we started our project in 1993. It is called ELCAP--Early Lung Cancer Action Project--and we enrolled a thousand people at two institutions to see how often we could detect nodules, how often they were cancer, and how to best work them up.

About Dr. Henschke, M.D., Ph.D.:
Dr. Claudia Ingrid Henschke, M.D., Ph.D., M.S., is an Attending Radiologist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Professor of Radiology in Cardiothoracic Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical School. She is a clinical expert in percutaneous fine needle lung biopsies and thoracic radiology and board certified in Diagnostic Radiology. Dr. Henschke received her master’s degree from Southern Methodist University, her Ph.D. from the University of Georgia, and medical degree from Howard University College of Medicine.

Visit Dr. Henschke at Weill Cornell Medical College

 
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