Impact of racial disparities in follow-up and quality of colonoscopy on colorectal cancer outcomes

Author:

Alagoz Oguzhan1ORCID,May Folasade P2,Doubeni Chyke A3,Fendrick A Mark45,Vahdat Vahab6,Estes Chris6,Ellis Travelle6,Limburg Paul J6,Brooks Durado6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Industrial & Systems Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI, USA

2. Department of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Health and UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity , Los Angeles, CA, USA

3. Department of Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Wexner Medical Center, The Ohio State University , Columbus, OH, USA

4. Department of Internal Medicine and Department of Health Management and Policy, Division of General Medicine, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI, USA

5. Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, University of Michigan , Ann Arbor, MI, USA

6. Exact Sciences Corporation , Madison, WI, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The benefits of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening programs rely on completing follow-up colonoscopy when a noncolonoscopy test is abnormal and on quality of colonoscopy screening as measured by the endoscopists’ adenoma detection rate. Existing data demonstrate substantially lower follow-up colonoscopy rates and adenoma detection rate for Black Americans than White Americans. However, the contributions of racial differences in follow-up colonoscopy and adenoma detection rate on CRC outcomes have not been rigorously evaluated. Methods We used established and validated CRC-Adenoma Incidence and Mortality (CRC-AIM) model as our analysis platform, with inputs from published literature that report lower follow-up colonoscopy rates and adenoma detection rate in Black adults compared with White adults (15% and 10% lower, respectively). We simulated screening with annual fecal immunochemical test, triennial multitarget stool DNA, and colonoscopy every 10 years between ages 45 and 75 years using real-world utilization of the screening modalities vs no screening. We reported lifetime outcomes per 1000 Black adults. Results Elimination of Black-White disparities in follow-up colonoscopy rates would reduce CRC incidence and mortality by 5.2% and 9.3%, respectively, and improve life-years gained with screening by 3.4%. Elimination of Black-White disparities in endoscopists’ adenoma detection rate would reduce CRC incidence and mortality by 9.4% and improve life-years gained by 3.7%. Elimination of both disparities would reduce CRC incidence and mortality by 14.6% and 18.7%, respectively, and improve life-years gained by 7.1%. Conclusions This modeling study predicts eliminating racial differences in follow-up colonoscopy rates, and quality of screening colonoscopy would substantially reduce Black-White disparities in CRC incidence and mortality.

Funder

Exact Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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