Implementation of the NHS England Lung Cancer Screening Programme over 5 years
Summary
Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography has been proven to reduce lung-cancer-specific and all-cause mortality. The UK launched the NHS England Targeted Lung Health Check Programme in 2019, which has now become the national Lung Cancer Screening Programme, with full coverage expected by 2030. Here we present the progress and outcomes of the program. People aged 55-74 were offered low-dose computed tomography of the thorax if they had ever smoked and if risk thresholds, as d
Content
# Implementation of the NHS England Lung Cancer Screening Programme over 5 years
*Published: 2026 May*
Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography has been proven to
reduce lung-cancer-specific and all-cause mortality. The UK launched the NHS
England Targeted Lung Health Check Programme in 2019, which has now become the
national Lung Cancer Screening Programme, with full coverage expected by 2030.
Here we present the progress and outcomes of the program. People aged 55-74 were
offered low-dose computed tomography of the thorax if they had ever smoked and
if risk thresholds, as determined by multivariable models, were met. Delivery of
the program is through regionally federated clinical infrastructure and
leadership, with national strategic, clinical and economic frameworks. The
program has invited over two million people, with 7,193 lung cancers
diagnosed-63.1% at tumor, node, metastasis stage 1 and 12.6% stage 2-to March
2025. This has increased the early-stage proportion of lung cancer in England
over 5 years, particularly in socioeconomically deprived regions. The NHS
England Programme exemplifies how large-scale implementation can be achieved at
speed through centralized protocols and effective project management. The
program has demonstrated feasibility and scalability in reaching high-risk and
underserved populations, but needs to further address inequalities in
participation. These findings support adoption of lung cancer screening across
the UK and globally, and offer practical tools for international adaptation.
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-026-04292-y