Implementing screening for colorectal cancer
- 6 November 1999
- Vol. 319 (7219) , 1212-1213
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.319.7219.1212
Abstract
Clinical review p 1249 We now have proof that screening can reduce mortality from colorectal cancer Three randomised trials have shown that screening by faecal occult blood testing every two years has the potential to reduce mortality by up to 20%.1–3 With expected compliance rates of around 60%, screening of 50-69 year olds would prevent around 1200 deaths from colorectal cancer each year in the United Kingdom. These estimated benefits are similar to those of three yearly mammography screening in preventing breast cancer mortality, with similar costs of around £40m a year. Thus the UK Screening Committee is about to start two pilot studies examining the feasibility of implementing national faecal occult blood screening. As well as issues concerning the faecal occult blood test itself, there is also no consensus about the best method of investigating those who test positive. Each pilot site comprises 1 million population, with 20% in the target age range 50-69 years. The pilots will examine a single round of two yearly screening. Thus, faecal occult blood tests will be sent to 100 000 people in year 1 and to the remaining 100 000 in year 2. The test requires participants to take a more active role than with other screening tests. They must sample three consecutive stools and repeat the examination, with dietary restriction, if the result is equivocal (expected in 2% of cases). With a compliance rate of 60% and positivity rate of 2%, 1200 people in …Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Predicting advanced proximal colonic neoplasia with screening sigmoidoscopy.JAMA, 1999
- Colorectal Cancer Mortality: Effectiveness of Biennial Screening for Fecal Occult BloodJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1999
- Planning for a possible national colorectal cancer screening programmeJournal of Medical Screening, 1998
- Complications of barium enema examinations: A survey of UK consultant radiologists 1992 to 1994Clinical Radiology, 1997
- Relative sensitivity of colonoscopy and barium enema for detection of colorectal cancer in clinical practiceGastroenterology, 1997
- Randomised study of screening for colorectal cancer with faecal-occult-blood testThe Lancet, 1996
- Randomised controlled trial of faecal-occult-blood screening for colorectal cancerThe Lancet, 1996
- The Yield of Flexible Sigmoidoscopy and Double-Contrast Barium Enema in the Diagnosis of Neoplasms in the Large Bowel in Patients with a Positive Hemoccult TestEndoscopy, 1995
- Do characteristics of adenomas on flexible sigmoidoscopy predict advanced lesions on baseline colonoscopy?Gastroenterology, 1994
- Long-Term Risk of Colorectal Cancer after Excision of Rectosigmoid AdenomasNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992