• Dépistage, diagnostic, pronostic

  • Politiques et programmes de dépistages

  • Colon-rectum

Impact of changes to the interscreening interval and faecal immunochemical test threshold in the national bowel cancer screening programme in England: results from the FIT pilot study

Menée à partir des données d'une étude anglaise portant sur 27 238 personnes ayant participé à un programme de dépistage du cancer colorectal utilisant un test FIT (âge : 59-75 ans), cette étude estime, en fonction du seuil de positivité du test et du délai entre deux sessions de dépistage, le nombre de coloscopies générées ainsi que le nombre d'adénomes et de cancers colorectaux détectés

Introduction : The NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP) faces endoscopy capacity challenges from the COVID-19 pandemic and plans to lower the screening starting age. This may necessitate modifying the interscreening interval or threshold.

Methods : We analysed data from the English Faecal Immunochemical Testing (FIT) pilot, comprising 27,238 individuals aged 59–75, screened for colorectal cancer (CRC) using FIT. We estimated screening sensitivity to CRC, adenomas, advanced adenomas (AA) and mean sojourn time of each pathology by faecal haemoglobin (f-Hb) thresholds, then predicted the detection of these abnormalities by interscreening interval and f-Hb threshold.

Results : Current 2-yearly screening with a f-Hb threshold of 120 

μg/g was estimated to generate 16,092 colonoscopies, prevent 186 CRCs, detect 1142 CRCs, 7086 adenomas and 4259 AAs per 100,000 screened over 15 years. A higher threshold at 180

μg/g would reduce required colonoscopies to 11,500, prevent 131 CRCs, detect 1077 CRCs, 4961 adenomas and 3184 AAs. A longer interscreening interval of 3 years would reduce required colonoscopies to 10,283, prevent 126 and detect 909 CRCs, 4796 adenomas and 2986 AAs.

Conclusion

:

Increasing the f-Hb threshold was estimated to be more efficient than increasing the interscreening interval regarding overall colonoscopies per screen-benefited cancer. Increasing the interval was more efficient regarding colonoscopies per cancer prevented.

British Journal of Cancer , article en libre accès, 2022

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