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Chief, Division of Gastroenterology. Oregon Health Sciences University ... Morikawa et al; Gastroenterology 2005; 129: 422-8. Levi et al; Ann Intern Med 2007; 146: ...
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2. Risk Factors for CRC
3. Colorectal Cancer
4. Guideline Process Prior guidelines from multiple organizations
Consensus guideline included:
American Cancer Society
Multi-Society Task Force on Colorectal Cancer
GI organizations and American College of Physicians
American College of Radiology
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
5. Guideline Process Rules of evidence
Where evidence was lacking:
Expert opinion
Areas for research noted
Emphasis on Quality in each program
6. Lifestyle and Diet
7. New CRC Guideline: Key Principles Distinguish between
Early cancer detection tests
Cancer prevention tests
Establish minimum standard for early cancer detection tests
Emphasis on quality
8. Raising the bar
9. Average-Risk CRC Screening
10. Fecal Occult Blood Test: FOBT
11. FOBT- One-time testing
12. Stool Genetic Tests - Issues One-time test can detect more than 50% of cancers
Evolving
Costly
13. FOBT: Mortality Reduction
14. Early Cancer Detection Tests Requires programmaticadherence with (+) and (-) tests
Programmatic performance:
Unlikely to result in much cancer prevention
15. Adenoma and Cancer Detection Tests
16. CT Colonography
17. CT Colonography: Who should be referred for Colonoscopy ?
18. CT Colonography: Issues Inter-observer variability
Detection of flat polyps
Bowel Prep
Radiation
Extracolonic findings
Intervals uncertain:
After negative exam
After exam with small polyps
19. Adenoma and Cancer Detection Tests
20. Colonoscopy Screening Studies (n > 1000) Studies: 2000-2004
VA Cooperative Study ;NEJM: 2000; 343: 162-8 (n = 3121)
Indiana Study; NEJM 2000; 343: 169-74 (n = 1994)
CT Colonography studies (n = 2447) (Pickhardt, Rockey, Cotton)
Fecal DNA Study; NEJM 2004; 351: 2704-14 (n = 4404)
Spain, Am J Gastroenterol 2003; 98: 2648-54 (n = 2210)
Studies: 2005-2006
Women: (Schoenfeld) NEJM 2005; 352: 2061-8 (n = 1463)
Taiwan; Gastrointest Endosc 2005; 61: 547-53 (n = 1708)
Japan, Gastroenterology 2005; 129: 422-8 (n = 21,805 with iFOBT)
Seattle, JAMA 2006; 295: 2357-65 (N = 1244)
Poland, NEJM 2006; 355: 1863-72 (n = 50,148)
Germany (n = 1.14M)
22. Colonoscopy Appropriate utilization
High-quality exam to cecum
Low rate of missed lesions
Low rate of incompletely removed lesions
Low rate of adverse events
23. Colonoscopy Issues Bowel Prep
Quality Issues
Missed lesions
Safety
24. Obstacles to Screening:Perceptions Patient education:Screening works !!!
25. Obstacles to Screening:Perceptions It is not fun
It is not effective
It is not clear what test to use
It costs too much
26. Cost of not screening
27. Overcoming Obstacles Patient Education
Provider Education
Understanding obstaclesto compliance
28. Colon Screening in USA
29. CRC Age-adjusted incidence rates/100,000210,452 white Americans >21 yrs
30. Summary of 2008 CRC Screening Guideline Distinguishes:
Tests which detect early cancer
31. Raising the bar