Abstract

The prevalence of colorectal adenoma and advanced adenoma (AA) differs between sexes. Also, the optimal age for the first screening colonoscopy is under debate. We, therefore, performed a sex-specific and age-adjusted comparison of adenoma, AA and advanced neoplasia (AN) rates in a real-world screening cohort. In total, 2824 asymptomatic participants between 45- and 60-years undergoing screening colonoscopy at a single-centre in Austria were evaluated. 46% were females and mean age was 53 ± 4 years. A propensity score for being female was calculated, and adenoma, AA and AN detection rates evaluated using uni- and multivariable logistic regression. Sensitivity analyses for three age groups (group 1: 45 to 49 years, n = 521, 41% females, mean age 47 ± 1 years; group 2: 50 to 54 years, n = 1164, 47% females, mean age 52 ± 1 years; group 3: 55 to 60 years, n = 1139, 46% females, mean age 57 ± 2 years) were performed. The prevalence of any adenoma was lower in females (17% vs. 30%; OR 0.46, 95% CI 0.38–0.55; p < 0.001) and remained so after propensity score adjustment for baseline characteristics and lifestyle factors (aOR 0.52, 95% CI 0.41–0.66; p < 0.001). The same trend was seen for AA with a significantly lower prevalence in females (3% vs. 7%; OR 0.38, 95% CI 0.26–0.55; p < 0.001) that persisted after propensity score adjustment (aOR 0.54, 95% CI 0.34–0.86; p = 0.01). Also, all age-group sensitivity analyses showed lower adenoma, AA and AN rates in females. Similar numbers needed to screen to detect an adenoma, an AA or AN were found in female age group 3 and male age group 1. Colorectal adenoma, AA and AN were consistently lower in females even after propensity score adjustment and in all age-adjusted sensitivity analyses. Our study may add to the discussion of the optimal age for initial screening colonoscopy which may differ between the sexes.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of colorectal adenoma and advanced adenoma (AA) differs between sexes

  • A propensity-matched analysis correcting for metabolic and nutritional factors that significantly differed between sexes, evenly distributing these factors, confirmed that adenoma and advanced adenoma detection rates remained different between sexes independently of these factors

  • We showed that number needed to screen (NNS) for adenoma, AA and advanced neoplasia (AN) rates were similar in male patients aged 45 to 49 years and female patients aged 55 and 60 years

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of colorectal adenoma and advanced adenoma (AA) differs between sexes. All age-group sensitivity analyses showed lower adenoma, AA and AN rates in females. Colorectal adenoma, AA and AN were consistently lower in females even after propensity score adjustment and in all age-adjusted sensitivity analyses. The optimal age recommendations for starting colorectal cancer (CRC) screening are a matter of debate. A similar trend was observed in the European population: CRC incidences are rising in subjects younger than 50 years and declining in individuals over 50 ­years[10]. The change in age recommendations would redistribute resources to a younger population at lower absolute risk for CRC, as the incidence of adenoma, AA and CRC are rising with a­ ge[9,14,15]. CRC and AA rates seem to be similar in both sexes until the age of 35, diverging thereafter with higher incidence in males, and a widening gap with increasing a­ ge[9]

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