Early detection of colorectal cancer with faecal occult blood test screening

Author:

Paimela H1,Malila N23,Palva T4,Hakulinen T2,Vertio H5,Järvinen H6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, University of North Norway, Narvik Hospital, Narvik, Norway

2. Finnish Cancer Registry, Helsinki, Finland

3. Tampere School of Public Health, University of Tampere, Finland

4. Pirkanmaa Cancer Society, Tampere, Finland

5. Cancer Society of Finland, Helsinki, Finland

6. Department of Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

Abstract

Abstract Background Faecal occult blood test (FOBT) screening has been shown to decrease the incidence and mortality from colorectal cancer. This study compared the stage profile of patients with colorectal cancer diagnosed at the first FOBT screening round with that of an unscreened control group. Methods Subjects aged 60–64 years were allocated randomly to biennial FOBT screening (52 998 subjects) or a control group (53 002) in a Finnish prospective public health policy in 2004–2006. FOBT was performed with a guaiac test. At the end of 2007 the screened and control populations were linked to the Finnish Cancer Registry database, and the colonoscopic findings in the screen positives were analysed. Results Early-stage colorectal cancer was observed in 52 per cent of the FOBT-positive subjects, in 42·2 per cent of the total screened population and in 38 per cent of the control population (P = 0·191 for FOBT positives, P = 0·592 for total screened population). The prevalence of adenomas and colorectal cancer was 31·5 and 8·2 per cent respectively among the 806 subjects with a positive FOBT. Some 27·3 per cent of all colorectal tumours in the screened population were interval cancers. The tumour was located in the right colon in 28·9 per cent of the screened subjects and 22 per cent of controls (P = 0·255). Conclusion Biennial FOBT screening improves detection of colorectal cancer at the first screening round, but the high percentage of interval cancers is a cause for concern.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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