Abstract
The effectiveness of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening programs is directly related to participation and the number of interval CRCs. The objective was to analyse specific-mortality in a cohort of individuals invited to a CRC screening program according to type of CRC diagnosis (screen-detected cancers, interval cancers, and cancers among the non-uptake group). Retrospective cohort that included invitees aged 50-69 years of a CRC screening program (target population of 85,000 people) in Catalonia (Spain) from 2000-2015 with mortality follow-up until 2020. A screen-detected CRC was a cancer diagnosed after a positive faecal occult blood test (guaiac or immunochemical); an interval cancer was a cancer diagnosed after a negative test result and before the next invitation to the program (≤24 months); a non-uptake cancer was a cancer in subjects who declined screening. A total of 624 people were diagnosed with CRC (n = 265 screen-detected, n = 103 interval cancers, n = 256 non-uptake). In the multivariate analysis, we observed a 74% increase in mortality rate in the group with interval CRC compared to screen-detected CRC adjusted for age, sex, location and stage (HR: 1.74%, 95% CI:1.08-2.82, P = 0.02). These differences were found even when we restricted for advanced-cancers participants. In the stratified analysis for type of faecal occult blood test, a lower mortality rate was only observed among FIT screen-detected CRCs. CRC screening with the FIT was associated with a significant reduction in CRC mortality.
Highlights
ObjectivesThe aim of the study was to quantify the impact on mortality of identifying colorectal cancer (CRC) through screening compared to interval cancer
The effectiveness of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening programs is directly related to participation and the number of interval CRCs
A screen-detected CRC was a cancer diagnosed after a positive faecal occult blood test; an interval cancer was a cancer diagnosed after a negative test result and before the invitation to the program ( 24 months); a non-uptake cancer was a cancer in subjects who declined screening
Summary
The aim of the study was to quantify the impact on mortality of identifying CRCs through screening compared to interval cancer
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