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In England, 37 people die each day from bowel cancer, but screening using fecal blood testing followed by a colonoscopy can reduce both the incidence of this cancer and the number of resulting deaths. The NHS bowel cancer screening program invites everyone of a certain age to use a home kit that tests the amount of blood in their feces. Those who have a fecal blood test result above a defined level are invited for a colonoscopy, but two factors—the COVID-19 pandemic and the introduction of a lower screening invitation age—have led to a higher demand for colonoscopy appointments, creating a backlog of patients.

The research, led by Queen Mary University of London, evaluated the impact of two potential solutions that could help manage the demand for : increasing the time span between screening invitations or increasing the level at which the fecal test result triggers a colonoscopy invitation.

Researchers analyzed data from 27,238 people aged 59-75 who were screened in the English Fecal Immunochemical Testing pilot study. Results suggest that changing the blood level at which the fecal blood test triggered an invitation to colonoscopy was a more effective tactic than changing the gap between screening invitations. While both methods could reduce the number of colonoscopies, increasing the fecal blood trigger point would result in fewer lives lost than changing the invitation interval.

Lead author and Professor of Cancer Screening at Queen Mary University of London, Stephen Duffy says that "there have been inevitable delays in screens as a result of the pandemic, but the NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Program is recovering well. There are still pressures due to the age extension. If the program must be adapted to cope with limited availability of , our results indicate that changing the FIT threshold may be the most useful option."

Co-author Peter Sasieni, Academic Director of the Clinical Trials Unit and Professor of Cancer Prevention at King's College London says that "these results are important because they show how to minimize the impact of the disruption to screening caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. But they must not be used as a justification to reduce the accuracy of bowel screening permanently. The threshold of the stool test used for bowel screening in England is already considerably higher than in most other countries. The long-term aim must be to lower the threshold whilst maintaining good screening coverage nationally."

The research was published in the British Journal of Cancer.

More information: Shuping J. Li et al, 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, British Journal of Cancer (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41416-022-01919-y

Journal information: British Journal of Cancer