Deep learning can predict lung cancer risk from single LDCT scan
The AI model could be especially useful in people who have never smoked.
2025-05-19
(Press-News.org) EMBARGOED UNTIL: 2:15 p.m., Monday, May 19, 2025
DEEP LEARNING CAN PREDICT LUNG CANCER RISK FROM SINGLE LDCT SCAN
The AI model could be especially useful in people who have never smoked.
Session: B100—Revolutionizing Nodule Management and Lung Cancer Diagnosis
Validation of Sybil Deep Learning Lung Cancer Risk Prediction Model in Asian High- and Low-Risk Individuals
Date and Time: Monday, May 19, 2025, 2:15 p.m.
Location: Room 211-212 (South Building, Level 2) Moscone Center
ATS 2025, San Francisco – A deep learning model was able to predict future lung cancer risk from a single low-dose chest CT scan, according to new research published at the ATS 2025 International Conference.
The model, called Sybil, which was originally developed using National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) data by investigators from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard Medical School, could be used to guide more personalized lung cancer screening strategies. It could be an especially valuable tool in Asia, where incidence of lung cancer in nonsmokers is rising, and many people without conventional risk factors don’t meet screening guidelines, researchers said.
“Sybil demonstrated the potential to identify true low-risk individuals who may benefit from discontinuing further screening, as well as to detect at-risk groups who should be encouraged to continue screening,” said corresponding author Yeon Wook Kim, MD, a pulmonologist and researcher at Seoul National University Bundang Hospital in Seongnam, Republic of Korea.
Current international guidelines do not recommend lung cancer screening for people considered lower-risk, such as individuals who have never smoked. However, lung cancer rates are rising in this group, and the lung cancer burden in this population is significant.
This disconnect between risk and screening is especially a concern in Asia. The region accounts for more than 60 percent of new lung cancer cases and related deaths globally, with a rising incidence among people who have never smoked, Dr. Kim said. He also noted that the epidemiology of lung cancer in Asia is different from the populations where screening criteria were developed and validated. This has led to an increase in screening that is self-initiated or not consistent with guidelines, but there’s a lack of data to suggest who should be screened and who should not.
For the new paper, researchers evaluated more than 21,000 individuals aged 50-80 who underwent self-initiated LDCT screening between 2009 and 2021 and followed their outcomes until 2024. The screening tests were analyzed by Sybil to calculate the risk of future lung cancer diagnosis. The model demonstrated good performance in predicting cancer diagnosis at both one and six years, including in never-smokers.
“Sybil’s value lies in its unique ability to predict future lung cancer risk from a single LDCT scan, independent of other demographic factors that are conventionally used for risk stratification,” Dr. Kim said.
The model could be used to develop personalized strategies for individuals who have already undergone LDCT screening but have not received further recommendations for additional screening or follow-up. Prospective validation will be needed to confirm the model’s potential for clinical use.
Researchers plan to follow up on the study.
“Based on our results, we are eager to conduct a prospective study to further validate and apply Sybil in a pragmatic clinical setting, as well as to enhance the model’s ability to predict other important outcomes, such as lung cancer-specific mortality,” Dr. Kim said.
###
VIEW ABSTRACT
You may also be interested in these abstracts.
CONTACT FOR MEDIA:
Dacia Morris
dmorris@thoracic.org
Mincae Jung
02245snubh.org
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-05-19
LA JOLLA, CA—Historically, most human mpox infections have resulted from zoonotic transmission—meaning from animals to humans—and these spillovers have rarely led to human-to-human transmission. But during the 2022 global outbreak, mpox began spreading readily between people. A new study now shows the virus was circulating long before then.
Published in Nature on May 19, 2025, the study notes that mpox transmitted among humans in Nigeria for eight years before sparking the international outbreak in 2022. Using genomic tracing, the researchers estimate that the virus’ ancestor first emerged in southern Nigeria in August 2014 and spread to 11 states before ...
2025-05-19
Ishani Ganguli, MD, MPH, and Nicholas E. Daley, AB, of the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital are co-authors of a paper published in JAMA Health Forum, “Gender Differences in Primary Care Physician Earnings and Outcomes Under Medicare Advantage Value-Based Payment.”
Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience?
Despite often achieving better patient outcomes, women primary care physicians (PCPs) face a significant and ongoing wage gap compared to their male counterparts. This disparity is partly due to volume-based payment models, where doctors are compensated per visit or service. ...
2025-05-19
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Food cravings are the downfall of many dieters, who feel locked in an eternal battle with their willpower to resist the tempting sweets, snacks and other foods they love.
However, researchers in food science and human nutrition at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign say in a new study that eating dessert may be the optimal strategy for losing weight, keeping it off and keeping cravings at bay. Dieters in a clinical trial who incorporated craved foods into a balanced meal plan lost more weight during ...
2025-05-19
Embargoed for release until 5:00 p.m. ET on Monday 19 May 2025
Follow @Annalsofim on X, Facebook, Instagram, threads, and Linkedin
Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo ...
2025-05-19
What if ultrafast pulses of light could operate computers at speeds a million times faster than today's best processors? A team of scientists, including researchers from the University of Arizona, are working to make that possible.
In a groundbreaking international effort, researchers from the Department of Physics in the College of Science and the James C. Wyant College of Optical Sciences demonstrated a way to manipulate electrons in graphene using pulses of light that last less than a trillionth of a second. By leveraging a quantum effect known as tunneling, they recorded electrons bypassing a physical barrier almost instantaneously, a feat that redefines the ...
2025-05-19
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) hosted Innovation Day for Industry, May 7, at NRL-DC headquarters to inform industry and to assess interest in a focused set of six emerging technologies that are ready for collaboration with industry partners.
The event showcased a range of NRL-developed technologies ready for further development, prototyping and commercialization through partnerships with industry. The nearly 30 industry attendees gained valuable insights into NRL’s research and development efforts, including presentations, facility tours, and networking opportunities with NRL scientists, ...
2025-05-19
NEW ORLEANS, May 19, 2025 – Rocket launches are amazing spectacles, but close-up viewers know to bring a set of earplugs or earmuffs to protect their hearing. However, the boom of a launch isn’t reserved for those who sign up to watch it – it can also be heard and felt in surrounding communities.
SpaceX’s Falcon 9 is a rocket used for both human and nonhuman space missions. Since 2010, the rocket has been launched over 400 times, and one of the launch sites for Falcon 9 is the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.
“Although Ventura County is 60-100 miles from the Vandenberg ...
2025-05-19
WASHINGTON — Researchers have developed an extremely thin, flexible imager that could be useful for noninvasively acquiring images from inside the body. The new technology could one day enable early and precise disease detection, providing critical insights to guide timely and effective treatment.
“As opposed to existing prohibitively large endoscopes made of cameras and optical lenses or bulky fiber optic bundles, our microimager is very compact,” said research team leader Maysam Chamanzar from Carnegie Mellon University. “Much thinner than a typical eyelash, ...
2025-05-19
Scientists have uncovered the genetic underpinnings of one of the ocean’s most bizzare animals: a branching marine worm named Ramisyllis kingghidorahi that lives inside sea sponges and reproduces in a truly extraordinary way. Living hidden in tropical waters, this worm grows multiple body branches within a host sponge, each tail capable of producing separate living reproductive units called “stolons”. But how does a single animal coordinate sexual reproduction across so many branches? To find out, researchers led by the University of Göttingen analysed gene expression across different body regions and between male, female ...
2025-05-19
Between now and 2050, the International Energy Agency projects that more than $100 trillion will be spent on building net-zero energy infrastructure globally. Yet every single one of these projects runs the risk of higher-than-expected construction costs or time delays. Newer technologies introduced in the past decade, such as hydrogen or geothermal energy, are even more difficult to evaluate as government agencies, energy developers, utilities, investors, and other stakeholders decide which sustainable energy systems are best for future projects.
In a new state-of-the-art ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Deep learning can predict lung cancer risk from single LDCT scan
The AI model could be especially useful in people who have never smoked.