注:本医典也提供了针对直肠癌预防、结肠癌治疗和直肠癌治疗的单独医生数据查询(PDQ)摘要。
有确凿证据显示,结直肠癌(CRC)筛查可降低CRC死亡率。另外,也有确凿证据表明,一些CRC筛查策略还可降低CRC发病率。一项关于软式乙状结肠镜检查随机对照试验的Meta分析显示,乙状结肠镜筛查可降低全死因死亡率。
筛查干预 | 研究设计 | 内部效度 | 一致性 | 对CRC发病率的降低程度 | 对CRC死亡率的降低程度 | 外部效度 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
粪便隐血试验(愈创木脂试验) | 随机对照试验 | 良好 | 良好 | 可能小到无 | 15%–33% | 一般 |
粪便隐血试验(粪便免疫化学试验:FIT) | 正在进行中的RCT;但仅一项RCT设置了“无筛查”对照组 | 一般 | 一般 | 一般 | 一般 | 一般 |
乙状结肠镜检查 | 随机对照试验 | 良好 | 良好 | 20%–25% | 22%–31%;远端结肠13%–50% | 一般 |
直肠指检 | 病例对照研究 | 一般 | 良好 | 无效 | 无效 | 差 |
结肠镜检查 | 无RCT(RCT正在进行中);病例对照研究;使用历史/其他对照的观察性队列研究 | 差 | 差 | 左半结肠约60%-70%;右半结肠尚不确定 | 远端结肠约60%-70%;右半结肠尚不确定 | 一般 |
CRC=结直肠癌;FIT=粪便免疫化学检测;RCT=随机对照试验。 | ||||||
a 目前尚无其他筛查方法(如粪便隐血试验联合乙状结肠镜检查、钡灌肠、结肠镜检查、计算机断层扫描结肠成像以及粪便DNA突变检测)对CRC死亡率干预效果的RCT研究数据。 | ||||||
b 欧洲和美国正在开展2项关于FIT的RCT,以结肠镜检查为对照,而非无筛检为对照。瑞典也正在进行的一项试验(NCT02078804),基于人群比较结肠镜检查和FIT的筛查效果,目前尚未报道死亡率结果,且因未设置无筛检对照,FIT结果预期也可能有限。现行指南推荐使用基于愈创木脂检测机制的FIT,该方法的最高灵敏度接近FIT,并可显著降低CRC的死亡率和发病率。 |
Note: Separate PDQ summaries on Colorectal Cancer Prevention; Colon Cancer Treatment; and Rectal Cancer Treatment are also available.
Based on solid evidence, screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) reduces CRC mortality. In addition, there is solid evidence that some CRC screening modalities also reduce CRC incidence. A meta-analysis of flexible sigmoidoscopy randomized controlled trials found that screening with sigmoidoscopy reduces all-cause mortality.
Screening Intervention | Study Design | Internal Validity | Consistency | Magnitude of Effect on CRC Incidence | Magnitude of Effect on CRC Mortality | External Validity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fecal Occult Blood Test (guaiac-based) | RCTs | Good | Good | Likely small to none | 15%–33% | Fair |
Fecal Occult Blood Test (fecal immunochemical-based: FIT) | RCTs ongoing; however, only one RCT has a control group with 'no screening' | Fair | Fair | Fair | Fair | Fair |
Sigmoidoscopy | RCTs | Good | Good | 20%–25% | 22%–31%; 13%–50% for distal colon | Fair |
Digital Rectal Exam | Case-control studies | Fair | Good | No effect | No effect | Poor |
Colonoscopy | No RCTs (RCTs in-progress); case-control studies; observational cohort studies that use historical/other controls | Poor | Poor | About 60%–70% for left colon; uncertain for right colon | About 60%–70% for distal colon; uncertain for right colon | Fair |
CRC = colorectal cancer; FIT = fecal immunochemical testing; RCT = randomized controlled trial. | ||||||
aThere are no data from RCTs on the effect of other screening interventions (i.e., fecal occult blood test combined with sigmoidoscopy, barium enema, colonoscopy, computed tomographic colonography, and stool DNA mutation tests) on mortality from CRC. | ||||||
bFIT is being studied in two RCTs in Europe and the United States that compare FIT with colonoscopy, but without a no-screening comparison group. A trial (NCT02078804) in Sweden is currently under way to compare colonoscopy with FIT in population controls. Mortality results are not available, and may be limited for FIT because of the absence of a no-screening comparison group. Current guideline recommendations have depended upon FIT using the same mechanism as guaiac tests, the most sensitive of which had similar sensitivity to FIT and showed significant reductions in both mortality and incidence of CRC. |
结直肠癌(CRC)是全球第三大常见恶性肿瘤
而且是美国第三大癌症死因。
据估计,2020年美国将有147,950人新确诊患CRC,53,200人死于该病。2007至2016年间,55岁及以上成人CRC发病率每年下降3.6%,但55岁以下者每年上升2%。2008-2017年期间,55岁及以上成人CRC死亡率每年下降2.6%,但55岁以下者每年上升1%。
男性发病率高于女性,拉美裔男性最低,为40.0/10万,非裔男性最高,达52.4/10万;女性发病率从拉美裔的8.8/10万到非裔的39.1/10万不等。男性和女性的年龄标化死亡率分别为16.9/10万和11.9/10万。约4.4%的美国人一生中会患CRC,而死于CRC的终生风险为1.8%。
年龄别发病率和死亡率数据显示,大多数病例在50岁以后确诊;约4%结直肠癌病例发生在50岁前。
对1975-2010年全国数据进行的一项分析中探讨了CRC的长期趋势。
1975-1985年间男性发病率升高,1985-1995年间男、女性发病率均显著下降,1995-1998年间又略升高,之后的1998-2010年间再次显著下降。自1984年以来,男、女性CRC死亡率均呈下降趋势,尤其是2002年后男性呈现急速下降,女性则是2001后快速下降。1997-2010年所有种族/民族CRC发病率均有下降,在65岁及以上男、女性中下降速度最快;但在大多数亚组人群中50岁以下个体的发病率短期内呈逐年上升趋势。所有年龄男性和女性的远端结肠和直肠癌发病率均有所下降。所有种族/民族男女性近端结肠癌的发病率也有所下降。
年龄增长是个体CRC发病风险增加的主要因素。50岁之后发病风险大幅上升,90%的CRC确诊发生在50岁以后。若有一级亲属55岁前确诊CRC的家族史,个体CRC的发病风险几乎翻倍。有CRC或高危腺瘤(如>1cm的大管状腺瘤、无蒂锯齿状腺瘤、多发性腺瘤等)既往史的个体未来发生癌症的风险更高,对这些个体筛查之后的随访称之为监测,而非筛查。
遗传学的,
实验性的,和流行病学的
研究表明,CRC是遗传易感性与环境或生活方式因素复杂交互作用的结果。前期病因学研究提出了腺瘤性息肉(腺瘤)是大多数CRC癌前病变的假设。
实际上,降低腺瘤发病率和患病率的措施可降低CRC风险;
然而,部分CRC的死亡率可能是因病灶生长过快或病灶未经历腺瘤期所致。总的来说,关于腺瘤和CRC生长速率的细节尚不明了;最有可能的情况是存在非常多样的生长模式,包括腺瘤的形成和自然消退。
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common malignant neoplasm worldwide
and the third leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States.
It is estimated that there will be 147,950 new cases diagnosed in the United States in 2020 and 53,200 deaths due to this disease. From 2007 to 2016, CRC incidence declined by 3.6% per year among adults aged 55 years and older. However, from 2007 to 2016, in adults younger than 55 years, CRC incidence rates have been increasing by 2% per year. From 2008 to 2017, mortality from CRC declined by 2.6% per year among adults aged 55 years and older but increased by 1% per year among adults younger than 55 years.
Incidence is higher in men than in women. The incidence rates range from 40.0 per 100,000 per year in Hispanic men to 52.4 per 100,000 per year in African American men. In women, the incidence rates range from 28.8 per 100,000 per year in Hispanics to 39.1 per 100,000 per year in African Americans. The age-adjusted mortality rates are 16.9 per 100,000 per year in men and 11.9 per 100,000 per year in women. About 4.4% of Americans are expected to develop the disease within their lifetime, and the lifetime risk of dying from CRC is 1.8%.
Age-specific incidence and mortality rates show that most cases are diagnosed after age 50 years; about 4% of CRC cases occur in patients younger than age 50 years.
Long-term trends in CRC were addressed in an analysis of national data for the period 1975 to 2010.
Incidence increased for men from 1975 to 1985, but there were marked declines from 1985 to 1995 for both men and women followed by a nonsignificant increase from 1995 to 1998, then marked declines from 1998 to 2010. Death rates from CRC have declined since 1984 in both men and women, with an accelerated rate of decline since 2002 for men and since 2001 for women. From 1997 to 2010, CRC incidence declined for all racial/ethnic groups. The fastest annual rate of decline occurred in men and women aged 65 years or older, but short-term incidence trends increased annually for individuals younger than 50 years in most population subgroups. Incidence rates of distal colon and rectal cancers decreased in men and women for all ages combined. Incidence rates of proximal colon cancer also decreased in men and women for all race/ethnicities combined.
The major factor that increases a person’s risk for CRC is increasing age. Risk increases dramatically after age 50 years with 90% of all CRCs diagnosed after this age. History of CRC in a first-degree relative, especially occurring before age 55, roughly doubles the risk. While a personal history of CRC or high-risk adenomas (i.e., large [>1cm] tubular adenomas, sessile serrated adenomas, or multiple adenomas) indicates increased future risk of cancer, follow-up of these individuals after they have undergone screening is considered surveillance, and not screening.
Genetic,
experimental, and epidemiologic
studies suggest that CRC results from complex interactions between inherited susceptibility and environmental or lifestyle factors. Efforts to identify causes led to the hypothesis that adenomatous polyps (adenomas) are precursors of most CRCs.
In effect, measures that reduce the incidence and prevalence of adenomas may result in a subsequent decrease in the risk of CRCs;
however, some CRC mortality may be caused by fast-growing lesions or lesions that do not pass through an adenomatous phase. Overall, details about the growth rates of adenomas and CRC are unknown; most likely, there is a broad spectrum of growth patterns, including formation and spontaneous regression of adenomas.
FOBT检测是指采集和检测粪便样本中是否存在少量血液。第一代FOBT使用愈创木脂检测方法,比免疫化学法的灵敏度和特异度低。目前评价结直肠癌(CRC)死亡率降低效果的经典随机对照试验(RCT)均采用愈创木脂检测方法。FOBT能有效降低CRC死亡率的研究结果为推荐开展CRC筛查奠定了重要基础。第一代基于愈创木脂的检测技术正在被灵敏度和特异度更高的免疫化学法取代,这种新的检测方法尚未且可能永远不会在以无筛查组为对照的RCT中进行评估。
在此背景下,本文简要回顾了愈创木脂检测的相关RCT证据,并进一步讨论了免疫化学法FOBT(iFOBT或FIT)如何提供更高的灵敏度和特异度。一般来说,如果愈创木脂FOBT(gFOBT)作为筛查技术可行(如RCT所得研究结果),那么使用FIT这样灵敏度和特异度更高的筛查技术就更为可行。
不同gFOBT检测采集标本的方法有些许差异,但通常都是在3个不同日期采集3份不同的样本,每份样本均用棉棒选取少量并涂抹在一张卡片的两个显示窗口区,或存放于一个样本容器中。
愈创木脂检测可以检验过氧化物酶活性——这是人类和非人类血红蛋白的特征。因此该检测可识别来源于摄入肉类、上呼吸道出血(如鼻出血)、上消化道(GI)出血和结肠病变的血液。
Cochrane 协作组就所有涉及gFOBT检测的CRC筛查随机试验,针对其获益效果开展了一项系统综述。结果显示,相比对照组,筛查组的CRC死亡率降低了16%(相对危险度[RR],0.84;95%置信区间[CI], 0.78–0.90),但两组的全因死亡率无差异(RR,1.00;95% CI,0.99–1.02)。这些试验报告的FOBT检测阳性预测值(PPV)较低,提示大多数阳性结果实为假阳性;其中使用未再水化试纸的研究中(菲英岛和诺丁汉)的PPV为5.0%到18.7%,使用再水化试纸的研究(哥德堡和明尼苏达州)低至0.9%到6.1%。该报告未讨论对照组的沾染问题,也未涉及不同疾病分期的治疗信息。
在基线检查中,所有受试者的 gFOBT阳性率为1%-5%,所有阳性者中约2%-10%患有癌症,约20%-30%患有腺瘤,这取决于检测的具体方法。有关gFOBT的RCT数据汇总见表2。
四项已完成或进行中的RCT评估了gFOBT的筛查效果。尽管已有基于测量人类血红蛋白且灵敏度更高的粪便隐血检测方法(后文将展开讨论),但尚无基于RCT的效果报道。对gFOBT来说,瑞典试验以60-64岁个体为目标人群。
英国试验是从家庭医生的患者名单中选则受试者。
丹麦试验将45-75岁人群随机分配到对照组或干预组接受筛查检。
明尼苏达试验是将46551名50-80岁男女性受试者随机分为三组:每年一次gFOBT筛查组(主要为再水化技术和小部分未水化技术,n=15570)、每两年一次gFOBT筛查组(n=15587)和对照组(n=15394)。该试验18年的随访数据显示,与对照组相比,每年一次的FOBT筛查可使CRC死亡率降低33%(RR,0.67;95%CI,0.51-0.83),而每两年一次的筛查则降低21%(RR,0.79;95%CI,0.62–0.97)。
死亡率的降低可部分归因于结肠镜检查对癌症的机会性检出;愈创木脂试纸的再水化大大提高了阳性率,也继而增加了结肠镜检查的数量。
明尼苏达州的研究者们利用数学模型开展的后续分析表明,75%-84%患者的死亡率降低获益于筛查技术的灵敏度,机会性检出只发挥了部分作用(16%-25%)。
近85%的初筛阳性者接受了包括结肠镜或结肠气钡双重造影加软式乙状结肠镜(FS)的诊断程序。经过18年的随访,每年一次筛查组的CRC发病率降低了20%,而每两年一次筛查组的CRC发病率降低了17%。经过30年的随访,每年一次筛查组的CRC死亡率持续下降了32%(RR,0.68;95%CI,0.56-0.82),而每两年一次筛查组下降了22%(RR,0.78;95%CI,0.65–0.93)。但两个筛查组的全死因死亡率均未降低(每年一次筛查组RR,1.00;95%CI,0.99-1.01;而每两年一次筛查组RR,0.99;95% CI,0.98–1.01)。
有些重要信息未报道,包括不同组别不同分期CRC患者的治疗方案,以及试验完成后各组FOBT、乙状结肠镜、或结肠镜的参与情况。
英国试验中,筛查组和对照组个分配了将近76000人。筛查组在1985-1995年期间,用未再水化gFOBT检测每两年筛查一次,共进行了3-6轮筛查。中位随访时间达7.8年,60%的个体完成了至少一次筛查,38%完成了所有筛查。两组CRC累积发病率相似,筛查组CRC死亡率的RR下降15%(比值比[OR],0.85;95% CI,0.74–0.98)。
结肠镜检查的严重并发症的发生率为0.5%。在所有75253名筛查参与者中, 有5人因筛查出的CRC或腺瘤手术而在术后30天内死亡。
经11.8年的中位随访时间后,干预组和对照组的CRC发病率无差异。与筛查相关的CRC死亡率比为0.87(0.78-0.97;P=0.01),全因死亡率比为1.00(0.98-1.02;P=0.79)。
当中位随访时间达到19.5年时,CRC死亡率下降9%(RR,0.91;95% CI,0.84–0.98),而CRC发病率无下降( RR,0.97;95% CI,0.91–1.03),全死因死亡率亦无下降( RR,1.00;95% CI, 0.99–1.02)。
丹麦菲英岛的丹麦试验将约3.1万名受试者分为两组,筛查组接受每两年一次的未再水化gFOBT检测,17年间共完成9轮筛查。最终67%的受试者完成了首次筛查,随后每次筛查受试者中90%以上完成了FOBT检测。该试验发现,随访10年时CRC死亡率下降了18%,随访13年时下降了15%(RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.73–1.00),随访17年时下降了11%(RR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.78–1.01)。两组的CRC发病率和总死亡率几乎相同。
在哥德堡市开展的瑞典试验纳入了哥德堡市该市所有68308名出生于1918-1931年、年龄为60-64岁的居民,并按照几乎相同数量随机分配到数量几乎相同的筛查组和对照组。项目组未单独与对照组的个体联系,他们也不知晓自己是试验的一部分。根据出生年份,对三个不同的队列实施不同频率的筛查。使用第二代gFOBT检测进行筛查,并在限制饮食限制后实施进行检测。近92%的检测为再水化gFOBT。初筛阳性者继续后续程序,包括病史问询、FS和结肠气钡双重造影。因入组时间不同,随访时间为从6年7个月到19年5个月不等。该试验的主要终点事件是CRC特异性死亡率。总的筛查依从率为70%,且47.2%的个体完成了所有筛查程序。2180例初筛阳性参加者中,1890例(86.7%)完成看了完整的诊断评估流程,最终检出104例癌症和305例直径10毫米以上的腺瘤。总的来说,筛查组发现721例CRC患者(Dukes D期152例,Dukes C期184例),对照组发现754例CRC患者(Dukes D期161例,Dukes C期221例),发病率比为0.96 (95% CI,0.86–1.06)。筛查组和对照组分别有死于252例和300例CRC患者死于CRC252例,对照组300例,死亡率比为0.84(95%CI,0.71-0.99)。随访9年后两组结直肠癌死亡率出现的差异在随访9年后出现。两组的全因死亡率非常相近,死亡率比为1.02(95%CI,0.99–1.06)。
所有试验均显示,筛检人群中癌症分期分布比对照组更好(见表2)。丹麦试验表明,尽管筛查组和对照组的CRC累积发病率相似,但前者CRC和腺瘤中Dukes A期和Dukes B期病变的比例更高。
一项汇总所有两年一次FOBT随机对照试验的荟萃分析显示,gFOBT检测未能降低总死亡率(RR,1.002;95% CI,0.989–1.085)。与对照组相比,gFOBT筛查组CRC死亡的RR为0.87(95%CI,0.8-0.95),非CRC死亡的RR为1.02(95% CI,1.00–1.04;P = 0.015)。
数学模型已用于预测筛查试验的长期效果,以及社区卫生保健体系中普通人群从筛查项目中的获益。 基于目前可用筛查方法的建模项目显示,筛查可以降低CRC死亡率或提高预期寿命
研究中心 | 人口规模 | 阳性率(%) | 局限性癌症占比(%) | 检查间隔 | CRC死亡RR(95%CI) | CRC发病RR(95%CI) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
筛查组 | 对照组 | ||||||
明尼苏达州 | 48,000 | 未再水化:2.4% | 59 | 53 | 每年一次 | 0.67 (0.51–0.83) | 0.80 (0.70–0.90) |
再水化:9.8% | 每两年一次 | 0.79 (0.62–0.97) | 0.83 (0.73–0.94) | ||||
英国 | 150,000 | 未再水化:2.1% | 52 | 44 | 每两年一次 | 0.85 (0.74–0.98) | 1.04 (0.95–1.14) |
丹麦 | 62,000 | 未再水化:1.0% | 56 | 48 | 每两年一次 | 0.82 (0.68–0.99) | 1.00 (0.87–1.13) |
瑞典 | 68,308 | 未再水化:1.9% | 52 | 50 | 不固定 | 0.84 (0.71–0.99) | 0.96 (0.86–1.06) |
再水化:5.8% | |||||||
CI=置信区间;CRC=结直肠癌;RR=相对危险度 | |||||||
a%局限性癌占比=T1–3 N0 M0。 |
免疫化学FOBT检测(iFOBT或FIT)用于检测完整的人类血红蛋白。与gFOBT相比,FIT的优势在于可忽略饮食来源的非人类血红蛋白。此外,FIT也检测不到被部分消化的来自上呼吸道或上消化道的人类血红蛋白。一些商业化的FIT检测初步研究以同时进行的结肠镜检查为参照,获得了相应的灵敏度和特异度数据。这些研究还比较了使用不同界值的灵敏度和特异度、以及使用多个与单个粪便样本的获益。
总的来说,FIT检测比gFOBT更灵敏,对癌症比对良性病变更敏感。与预期一致,较高的界值设定降低了灵敏度,但提高了特异度。不同的FIT检测可能因粪便检测的次数和阳性界值设定的不同而产生差异。
一项2019年发表的针对FIT的系统综述共纳入了31项研究、120255名受试者和18种FIT检测方法,以结肠镜筛查为参考标准,计算了各种检测方法的灵敏度和特异度。
检测的阳性阈值设定会影响筛查效能,阈值为10µg/g(每克粪便中血红蛋白的微克数)时,对CRC筛查的灵敏度为0.91(95%CI,0.84–0.95),特异度为0.90(95%CI,0.86–0.93);当阈值大于20µg/g时,灵敏度为0.71(95%CI,0.56-0.83),特异度为0.95(95%CI,0.94-0.96)。对于进展期腺瘤,阈值设为10µg/g时,灵敏度为0.40(95%CI,0.33–0.47),特异度为0.90(95%CI,0.87–0.93)。由于可信区间重叠且既往研究为研究之间而非研究内部比较,尚无法定论这三个不同阈值下FIT筛查效能的优劣。总的来说,与gFOBT相比,FIT的灵敏度大幅提高,而特异度有所降低。
FIT检测的灵敏度可因结肠病变部位而异。右侧病变可能更难发现,可能的原因是该部位病变起源于扁平的锯齿状病变,且比传统腺瘤的血管少而较少出血。一项人群筛查项目每隔一年实施一次FIT筛查(设置为每毫升缓冲液检测100纳克血红蛋白),对期间完成六次FIT筛查的个体进行分析,以评估不同筛查频率对近端和远端病变的检出效果。
12年期间(2002-2014年)12.3万人共接受了44.1万人次的FIT检测。结果发现,近端结肠癌检出率仅从第一轮至第二轮有所下降(从0.63/千人下降至0.36/千人),而远端结肠癌和直肠癌检出率在六轮筛查中持续下降(远端癌检出率在第一轮筛查中为1.65/千人,第六轮为0.17/千人)。(进展期腺瘤也有类似趋势)。近端结肠的间期癌比例(观察到癌症人数与预期人数之比)高于远端结肠(分别为25.2%和6.0%),提示许多近端结肠癌(或其癌前病变)可能被FIT漏诊。这些结果表明,FIT对右半结肠癌和进展期腺瘤的灵敏度确实不高,尽管FIT阳性后的结肠镜检查有可能会放大其对癌前病变遗漏的程度。总的来说,这些研究结果对FIT降低右侧CRC死亡率的效能提出了质疑。
北加州和南加州的凯撒医疗中心开展了一项筛查项目,以评估FIT筛查效能和接受度随时间的变化情况。该回顾性队列研究对323349名50-70岁人群在4年间至多进行了4轮筛查。受邀个体第一轮的参与率为48.2%,其余合格对象中有75.3%-86.1%参与了随后的几轮。作者声称:“程序化FIT筛查检出了80.4%所有在筛检一年内确诊的CRC患者,其中第一轮检出84.5%,随后几轮分别检出了73.4%至78.0%的患者”。参与率是一个重要的观察指标。该研究的局限之一是无法判断工作流程导致的偏倚,例如:筛查阳性的个体均转至后续诊断以确定是否为癌,而筛查阴性的个体(可能已患癌)则不然。虽然使用了回顾法来确定个体是否患癌,但仍不能保证随访时间足够发现所有应纳入分母计算灵敏度的个体。然而,结果表明,后续的FIT结果可能与先前结果关系不大。需要更长时间的随访以证明这一点。该研究无法评估筛查对降低死亡率是否有效。
因上消化道出血风险增加而导致的假阳性结果是FOBT检测和前期准备需要关注的问题,因此,检测前需要停用低剂量阿司匹林至少1周。一项正在进行的诊断研究(2005-2009年)对FIT的检测性能进行了检测。该研究在德国南部的20家胃肠道内科诊所进行,分析中纳入了1979例患者(包括233例常规服用低剂量阿司匹林的患者和1746例从不服用者)的记录。所有患者在结肠镜检查前一周内提供一份粪便样本,样本按照要求被收集到容器中冷藏或冷冻,直到结肠镜检查当天送达诊所。所有患者均同意完成一份关于止痛药和小剂量阿司匹林(用于预防心血管疾病)使用情况的标准问卷。粪便样本送达中心实验室后(从接收诊所冷冻运送)平均解冻时间为4天。按照临床程序,在对结肠镜检查结果设盲的情况下,按照制造商提供的说明书,采用两种自动化FIT方法检测粪便隐血水平(RIDASCREEN血红蛋白检测套组和RIDASCREEN血红蛋白/结合珠蛋白复合物检测套组,r-biopharm公司,德国)。24名阿司匹林使用者(10.3%)和181名非阿司匹林使用者(10.4%)被发现患有进展期病变。使用制造商推荐的截断值,两种试验的灵敏度在阿司匹林使用组中分别为70.8%(95%CI,48.9%-87.4%)和58.3%(95%CI,36.6%-77.9%),在非使用组中分别为35.9%(95%CI,28.9%-43.4%)和32%(95%CI,25.3%-39.4%)(P值分别为0.001和0.01)。两种试验的特异度在使用组中分别85.7%(95%CI,80.2%-90.1%)和85.7%(95%CI,80.2%-90.1%),在非使用组中分别为89.2%(95%CI,87.6%-90.7%)和91.1%(95%CI,89.5%-92.4%)(p值分别为0.13和0.01)。可见,服用小剂量阿司匹林可使这些FIT检测检出进展期病变的灵敏度大大提高,而特异度仅略有下降,表明阿司匹林在不显著降低特异度的情况下具有提高灵敏度的优势。
软式乙状结肠镜于1969年问世。60厘米长度的软式乙状结肠镜于1976年投入使用。
软式乙状结肠镜比以往的硬性乙状结肠镜能更全面地检查远端结肠,患者耐受性更好。硬性乙状结肠镜能发现25%的息肉,60cm长的软式乙状结肠镜能发现多达65%的息肉。软式乙状结肠镜发现腺瘤时,可能需要对结肠更近端部分进行结肠镜检查。
进展期近端病变的患病率在绒毛状或管状绒毛状远端腺瘤患者中升高,在65岁及以上有结直肠癌家族史和有多发性远端腺瘤的患者中也有所升高。
这些腺瘤大多为息肉样、扁平、或凹陷性病变,可能比预期更为多见。
四项主要的乙状结肠镜筛查RCT报告了发病率和死亡率结果(第五项研究是挪威的泰勒马克郡试验,规模较小,仅800名参与者)。这四项试验分别是挪威结直肠癌预防(NORCCAP)试验、英国软式乙状结肠镜筛查试验(UKFSST)、意大利结直肠(SCORE)筛查试验、以及美国前列腺、肺、结直肠和卵巢癌(PLCO)筛查试验(见表3)。PLCO试验受试者年龄为55-74岁,其它三项试验为55-64岁。四项试验共有16.6万名受试者进入筛查组,25万人进入对照组。每组中位随访时间约为11年。三项系统综述对研究结果进行了汇总:CRC发病率相对下降了18%(RR为0.82;95%CI,0.75-0.89),死亡率总体相对下降28%(RR,0.72;95%CI,0.65-0.80),左半CRC发病率相对下降31%(RR,0.69;95%CI,0.63-0.74),左半CRC死亡率相对下降46%(RR为0.54;95%CI,0.43–0.67)。
一项荟萃分析显示,该筛查技术对全死因死亡率有影响,尽管临床意义不大但具有统计学意义(RR,0.97;95% CI, 0.96–0.99)。
上述四项试验中有三项公开发表了长期随访的试验结果。UKFSST试验的中位随访时间为17.1年,CRC发病和死亡的RR与最初报道类似:CRC死亡的RR为0.70(95%CI,0.62-0.79),CRC发病的RR为0.74(95%CI,0.70-0.80)。在PLCO试验中,对发病和死亡的中位随访时间分别为15.8年和16.8年:CRC死亡的RR为0.75(95%CI,0.66-0.85),CRC发病的RR为0.82(95%CI,0.76-0.88)。NORCCAP试验的中位随访时间约为15年;CRC死亡的HR为0.79(95%CI,0.65-0.96),CRC发病的HR为0.78(95%CI,0.70-0.87)。
2017年,英国试验发表了一份中位随访时间长达17.1年的长期随访分析。CRC发病率和死亡率的RR值与最初报道类似:CRC死亡率的RR为0.70(95%CI,0.62-0.79),CRC发病率的RR为0.74(95%CI,0.70-0.80)。
乙状结肠镜的相关研究没有提供强有力的直接证据,来确定筛查项目的最佳筛查频率。
研究中心 | 人群数量(干预) | 软式乙状结肠镜检查率 (%) | 结肠镜检查率(%) | CRC累积发病率(%) | 每10万人年CRC死亡人数 | CRC死亡的相对危险度(95%CI) | 远端CRC死亡的相对危险度(95%CI) | CRC发病的相对危险度(95%CI) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
英国2010年 | 干预组:57,099人 | 71.1 | 5 | 1.5 | 干预组:30人 | 0.69 (0.59–0.80) | 0.58 (0.46–0.74) | 0.77 (0.70–0.84) |
对照组:112,939人 | 对照组:44人 | |||||||
意大利2011年 | 干预组:17,136人 | 57.8 | 7.8 | 1.6 | 干预组:35 | 0.78(0.56-1.08) | 0.73(0.47–1.12) | 0.82 (0.69–0.96) |
对照组:17,136 | 对照组:44 | |||||||
美国2012年 | 干预组:77445 | 86.6 | 25.3 | 1.5 | 干预组:29 | 0.74 (0.63–0.87) | 0.50 (0.38–0.64) | 0.79 (0.72–0.85) |
对照组:77455 | 对照组:39 | |||||||
挪威2014年 | 干预组:20572天 | 63.0 | 19.5 | 1.4 | 干预组:31 | 0.73 (0.56–0.94) | 0.87 (0.61–0.043) | 0.80 (0.70–0.92) |
对照组:78,220 | 对照组:43 | |||||||
CI=置信区间;CRC=结直肠癌;FSG=软式乙状结肠镜检查;%=百分比。 | ||||||||
a 改编自Lin等学者。 | ||||||||
b 软式乙状结肠镜检查率指筛查组中接受过软式乙状结肠镜检查者所占的百分比 | ||||||||
c 结肠镜检查率是指接受乙状结肠镜检查且结果阳性者中,接受结肠镜检查作为诊断性随访者所占百分比。在美国的研究中,对乙状结肠镜检查时发现息肉的患者进行诊断性随访,通常是采用结肠镜检查完成的。在其他研究中,结肠镜检查的转诊标准取决于乙状结肠镜检查时发现的病变的组织学。 | ||||||||
d干预组的一半受试者也进行了FOBT筛查。 | ||||||||
e 这些数据均来自Lin等学者,e图1. FS筛查对远端CRC死亡率影响的随机对照试验森林图。 |
联合应用FOBT和乙状结肠镜可以提高左半结肠病变的检出率(与单纯乙状结肠镜相比),同时也可以提高右半结肠病变的检出率。乙状结肠镜可直接检出左半结肠的病变,但右半结肠的病变只有在乙状结肠镜检查阳性(发现进展期腺瘤、腺瘤或息肉)时进一步使用结肠镜检查整个结肠才能间接检出。
2885名退伍军人(97%为男性;平均年龄63岁)中,结肠镜检查发现进展期腺瘤的患病率为10.6%。据估计,联合应用单次FOBT和乙状结肠镜检查对进展期肿瘤的检出率为75.8%(95%CI,71.0%-80.6%)。结肠镜可替代乙状结肠镜对直肠和乙状结肠进行检查。结果显示,与单纯FS检查(70.3%;95% CI,65.2%–75.4%)相比,结肠镜检查可略增加进展期肿瘤的检出率,但差别无统计学意义。上述结果系假设所有远端结肠腺瘤患者均能完成结肠镜检查。进展期肿瘤的定义是病变直径超过10mm、包括25%及以上的绒毛状组织、重度不典型增生或浸润癌。
单次FOBT检测不同于表2 汇总的研究中所报道的每年或每两年一次的检测。
一项研究中纳入21794例无症状人群(72%为男性),所有受试者均行结肠镜和FIT检查,比较不同筛查技术对右半结肠癌的检出率。单用FIT筛查近端结肠癌的灵敏度为58.3%,特异度为94.5%。FIT加上发现的直肠乙状结肠进展期病变后,灵敏度提高为62.5%,特异度为93%。在此项研究中,与单独使用FIT相比,FIT联合乙状结肠镜并不能显著提高右半结肠癌的检出率。
由于目前没有已完成的结肠镜检查RCT结果,相关获益证据均是间接获取。大多数间接证据是关于具有临床意义的病变(如早期CRC或进展期腺瘤)检出率。部分病例对照研究结果可获得。已有三项结肠镜筛查的RCT研究启动(NCT 01239082、NCT 00883792和NCT 00906997)。
北欧结直肠癌项目(NordICC)是一项基于人群的随机试验,旨在研究在四个欧洲国家(挪威、波兰、瑞典和荷兰)开展结肠镜筛查对CRC发病率和死亡率的影响。NordICC从人口登记系统随机选择94959名55-64岁男性和女性,按1:2的比例随机分配至单次结肠镜筛查组和对照组。对照组受试者不予联系。主要研究终点是比较两组15年间CRC的死亡率。研究也报告了各个国家结肠镜筛查的参与率、参与经验、病变检出率和肠镜检查并发症相关结果。共31420名受试者被随机分配至结肠镜组,12574人(40.0%)接受了结肠镜检查。挪威参与率为60.7%(5334/8816),瑞典为39.8%(486/1222),波兰为33.0%(6004/18188),荷兰为22.9%(730/3194)。盲肠插管率为97.2%,不同国家的结果高度相近。其中9726名受试者(77.4%)未接受麻醉﹣挪威最低,仅10.8%,荷兰最高,达90%。12574例受试者中,发生1例穿孔(0.01%),2例息肉切除术后浆膜烧伤(0.02%),18例息肉切除术后出血(0.14%)。共确诊CRC 62例(0.5%)(远端50例,近端14例),腺瘤3861例(30.7%)。远端和近端高风险腺瘤分别为725例(5.8%)和562例(4.5%);远端和近端锯齿状息肉分别有2439例(19.4%)和1078例(8.6%)。内镜医师的操作水平存在明显差别。17.1%的内镜医师未达到盲肠插管的推荐标准(95%),28.6%的内镜医师未达到腺瘤检测的推荐标准(25%)。结肠镜检查后,接受标准空气注入检查的受试者中有16.7%出现中度或重度腹痛,而接受二氧化碳(CO2)注入者中4.2%出现中度或重度腹痛。
一项在3121名以男性为主的美国退伍军人(平均年龄63岁)中开展的结肠镜检查研究发现,10.5%的个体患有进展期肿瘤(定义为直径≥10.0 mm的腺瘤、绒毛状腺瘤、重度不典型增生腺瘤或浸润癌)。
在脾曲远端无腺瘤的患者中,2.7%有近端进展期肿瘤。与无远端结肠腺瘤的患者相比 (OR,2.6;90% CI,1.7–4.1),有远端大腺瘤(>10.0 mm)或小腺瘤(<10.0 mm)的患者更可能患有近端进展期肿瘤(OR,3.4;90% CI,1.8–6.5)。约一半近端进展期肿瘤患者未患有远端腺瘤。在一项对1994例成年人(50岁及以上)开展结肠镜筛查的研究中(作为雇主赞助项目的一部分),进展期肿瘤的患病率为5.6%。
近端进展期肿瘤患者中46%没有远端息肉(增生或腺瘤)。若仅对患有远端息肉的人群开展结肠镜筛查,约一半的近端进展期肿瘤不会被检出。
一项研究比较了乙状结肠镜和结肠镜在女性人群的筛查效果,在纳入的1463名女性中,检出癌症1例,进展期结肠肿瘤72例(4.9%),患病率约为男性的一半。需要说明的是,该研究关注的结局指标为RR值(进展期瘤变漏诊的RR值),而非进展期瘤变的绝对风险,后者在女性人群中更低。此外,进展期肿瘤的自然史尚不明确,将其检出率作为结局指标的意义也不清楚。
波兰华沙结肠镜筛查项目数据的分析结果证实,男性进展期肿瘤的检出率高于女性。在43042名50-66岁筛查参与者中,进展期肿瘤的检出率为5.9%(有CRC家族史的女性为5.7%,无CRC家族史的女性为4.3%,有CRC家族史的男性为12.2%,无CRC家族史的男性为8.0%)。共计完成50148筛查人次,发生需医疗干预的临床重要并发症很少(0.1%),包括5例穿孔、13例出血、22例心血管事件和11例其他事件,无死亡病例。作者还报告了其30天内并发症数据收集并不系统全面,因此相关数据可靠性值得商榷。
扁平或不易检出的病变包括锯齿状息肉,其在右半结肠比左半结肠更常见。“锯齿状息肉”目前包括增生性息肉、无蒂锯齿状腺瘤、传统锯齿状腺瘤和混合锯齿状息肉。
这些病变的临床意义尚不明确,因为息肉的自然史很难获悉。然而,一些锯齿状病变的组织学和分子特征提示其有重要的恶变潜能(例如,BRAF基因突变可能是锯齿状息肉癌变的早期过程)。
这种恶变潜能,加上检出扁平病变的难度,一定程度地解释了最近关于结肠镜对右半结肠的保护作用不如左半结肠的报道。
2011年,一项研究报告了近端锯齿状息肉检出率的变异性。他们对一所大学的15名结肠镜操作技术人员进行研究发现,2000年至2009年近端锯齿状息肉的检出率变异很大 ,从0.01到0.26不等(每次结肠镜检查),提示在常规检查中很多近端锯齿状病变可能被漏诊。
锯齿状息肉的总体占比尚不清楚,部分原因是其未被发现和/或很难发现。
结肠镜筛查的检出率可因医师退镜时间不同而不同。一项研究发现,不同胃肠科医师的腺瘤检出率(每位受检者的平均病灶数为0.10-1.05;腺瘤患者的比例为9.4%-23.7%)和退镜时间均存在差异(操作时间为3.1-16.8分钟,不包括息肉切除)。平均退镜时间≥6分钟的操作者检出率高于平均退镜时间低于6分钟的操作者(任何肿瘤28.3% vs. 11.8%;P<0.001,进展期肿瘤6.4% vs. 2.6%;P< 0.005)。
德国CRC筛查项目前10年数据显示,男性非进展期腺瘤的检出率从13.3%上升到22.3%,女性检出率从8.4%上升到14.9%。然而,大多数非进展期腺瘤为小腺瘤(<0.5cm),其临床意义不明确。进展期腺瘤和CRC的检出率有小幅度提高。
腺瘤和癌症的总检出率可能会受到内镜医师对扁平腺瘤和扁平癌的探查彻底程度的影响。日本很多年前就已发现扁平肿瘤这一现象,但美国近年才有相关报道。一项研究中,内窥镜医师使用高分辨率白光内窥镜,检出的扁平或非息肉状病变仅占所有浅表结肠病变的11%,但这些扁平或非息肉状病变含有癌症(原位癌或浸润癌)的概率约为息肉状病变的9.8倍。
然而,由于扁平或非息肉状病变的定义是高度小于直径一半的病变,因此该研究中归类为非息肉状的许多病变很可能会被美国内窥镜医生常规地发现并描述为无蒂息肉样病变。非常扁平或凹陷病变的存在—凹陷病变非常少见但是更可能包含癌症—需引起内镜医师高度重视。
扁平病变可能会造成癌症漏诊现象。
一家卫生保健组织对136名胃肠病医师1998-2010年期间实施的314,872次结肠镜检查进行随访,每名医师至少开展了300次结肠镜检查,评估腺瘤检出率(ADR)的影响。该研究旨在确定间期CRC、间期晚期CRC和CRC死亡的发生情况及其与胃肠病医师ADR的关联性。共发生712例间期癌症(155例为晚期)和147例CRC死亡。ADR五分位最低至最高组的间期癌症发生风险分别为9.8、8.6、8.0、7.0和4.8/10,000人年。与ADR最低组相比,最高组间期癌、间期晚期癌和CRC死亡风险的调整HR分别为0.52,0.43和0.38。ADR每增加1.0%,间期癌发生风险下降3%,但每个五分位组的CI都很宽。该研究的局限性包括无法确定ADR的哪些具体特征导致间期癌的减少;例如,不清楚这是否由于下列原因:
另一个局限是无法评估ADR相关的结肠镜检查的危害。
迄今尚未实施评估结肠镜检查降低CRC发病率或死亡率的RCT,但已有一些病例对照的证据。根据上述乙状结肠镜的病例对照研究数据,过去曾有人推测其对右结肠的保护作用可能与对左结肠的保护作用相似。2009年一项结肠镜检查的病例对照研究提出问题:结肠镜检查对左右侧病变的影响是否不同?
利用加拿大安大略省的全省管理数据库,调查人员以1996-2001年确诊CRC并于2003年前死亡的病例为病例组,对照组选自未死于CRC的病例。基于医疗报销资料评估了两组之前有无结肠镜检查。完整结肠镜检查与左侧肠癌死亡率的OR值为0.33,提示死亡率显著降低。但对于右侧病变,其OR值仅为0.99,提示死亡率几乎没有降低。然而,这项研究在盲肠检查是否完整和肠道准备方面的数据有限。此外,许多内窥镜医师并非胃肠病医师。
一项病例对照研究评估了右侧和左侧CRC的下降(而非CRC死亡率下降)。德国一项基于人群的研究使用管理数据和医疗数据,对1688例病例组患者(有CRC)和1932例受试者(无CRC)进行了比较,年龄均在50岁及以上。
收集了人口统计学资料、危险因素和既往筛查信息。根据检查记录,91%的结肠镜检查到达盲肠。既往10年结肠镜检查史与CRC的OR值为0.23,其中右侧和左侧CRC的OR值分别为0.44和0.16。尽管本研究没有评估与CRC死亡率的关联性,但结果提示左侧与右侧关联强度的差异可能小于此前的研究报道。
基于RCT研究评估左右侧CRC的差异将十分有意义。
其他病例对照数据显示结肠镜检查约可降低64%右侧CRC的发生,左侧CRC则可降低74%。
由于没有RCT证据,病例对照证据也有限,因此研究结肠镜检查能多大程度降低死亡率十分重要。有时文献引用的死亡率降低程度为90%,该问题需待欧洲RCT完成后方可回答。该RCT的对照组为“常规护理”组,基本不涉及任何形式的筛查。
在结肠镜筛查的RCT研究提供更可靠的结果之前,将FS研究中左结肠CRC死亡率下降的结果,即最多可降低50%,用于估计右结肠CRC,从而提供对CRC死亡率降低的最佳估计。
虚拟结肠镜(也称为CTC或CT结肠充气检查)是指根据腹部CT检查获得的数据,对计算机生成的结肠图像进行检查。这些图像模拟了传统结肠镜检查的效果。患者必须在术前服用泻药以清洁结肠,在检查前通过插入直肠管使结肠充满空气(有时是二氧化碳)。
美国放射学会影像网络工作组开展了一项大型配对设计研究,2531名一般风险人群(≥10mm息肉或癌症现患率为4%;平均年龄约58岁)同时接受CTC及光学结肠镜检查(OC)。金标准是OC,包括对CTC检出但OC未发现的病变予以OC重复检查。共发现109人有至少一个10mm及以上的腺瘤或癌症,其中98例(90%)被CTC检出(指CTC病变≥5mm的个体)。特异度为86%,PPV为23%。本研究存在以下几个问题:
本次研究的未知因素涉及OC或CTC的以下方面:
另一项研究报告了在CRC高风险人群中有类似的灵敏度和特异度。
该研究未采用盲法,OC的灵敏度无法确定。该研究表明,虚拟结肠镜检查对CRC高危人群可能是一种可接受的筛查或监测方法,但该横断面研究未确定高危人群的检测结果或频率。
一些研究评估了虚拟结肠镜检查在没有泻药准备的情况下检测结直肠息肉的效果。这个问题对于实施来说非常重要,因为传统结肠镜检查和虚拟结肠镜检查都需要泻药准备,这对患者来说很不方便。在一项研究中,研究人员通过检测术前几天经碘造影剂标记后的粪便,可检测到大于8mm的病变,其灵敏度为95%,特异度为92%。
在这项研究中使用的特殊标记材料导致约10%的患者感到恶心;对其他材料的评估正在进行中。
另一项研究
采用低纤维饮食,口服造影剂和“电子清洁”,免去粪便标记的过程。CTC可检测到91%患有10mm及以上腺瘤的病人,但对8mm及以上病变的检出率要差一些( 70%)。同时接受CTC和OC检查的患者更倾向于选择CTC(290比175)。本研究表明,不使用泻药准备的CTC对于1cm的小病变,其检测灵敏度高,患者接受度好。CTC的长期应用将考量诸多问题,包括随访检查的频率,旨在检出目前未能检出但可随时间逐渐长大的更小病变。
结肠外异常在CTC检查中很常见。一项澳大利亚的病例系列研究发现,100名因症状或家族史转诊行结肠成像检查的患者中,15%发现有结肠外病变,11%的患者因肾脏、脾、子宫、肝脏和胆囊异常需要进一步的医疗检查。
在另一项研究中,111例有症状的患者于1998年6月至1999年9月期间转诊至瑞典一家医院接受临床结肠镜检查。59%的患者在CTC检查中发现存在中度或重度的结肠外病变。CTC检查后立即行结肠镜检查,这些发现需要进一步评估。尚不清楚对这些偶然发现进行随访可在多大程度上使患者获益。
明尼苏达州681例无症状患者中,69%检出结肠外病变,其中10%被研究者认为非常重要,需进一步医疗检查。可疑异常包括肾脏( 34例)、胸部( 22例)、肝脏(8例)、卵巢(6例)、肾或脾动脉(4例)、腹膜后腔(3例)和胰腺(1例)病变;然而,这些发现导致的获益或损害程度还不确定。另有一项大样本(N = 2195)和一项小样本研究(N = 136)评价了CTC检出结肠外病变的重要性。大样本研究发现8.6%的患者有至少中度重要的结肠外病变,而小样本研究中24%的患者需要对结肠外病变进一步评估。大样本研究共确诊了9例癌症,根据部分费用(不包括所有费用)数据估算,每初筛一例患者的费用为98.56美元。小样本研究未发现重要病变,每做一例筛查的费用为248美元。两项研究估计的费用均高于此前研究报道。目前尚不清楚患者在多大程度上受益于结肠外检查结果。由于两项研究都是在学术性医疗中心开展,对其他机构的适用性尚不清楚。这两项研究均未评估结肠外病变检查结果对患者焦虑和心理功能的影响。
许多研究中心正在开展针对图像识别方法(如三维成像)和肠道准备技术改进的研究。虽然诸多研究对检出息肉的特异度均很高,但其灵敏度差别很大。产生差别的原因可归结于多个因素,包括CT扫描仪和检测器的特征、准直宽度、成像模式( 二维与三维和/或穿透)以及放射科医生专业技能的差异。
一项病例对照研究报告,常规直肠指检不能显著降低远端直肠癌的死亡率。
结直肠腺瘤和癌症发生相关的分子遗传学改变已明确。
先进的技术已研发并应用于检测粪便脱落细胞中这些基因突变。
最近一项前瞻性研究评估了粪便DNA检测技术,该研究中无症状受试者接受结肠镜检查、三色卡FOBT( 隐血检测试纸 II)和可评估21种突变标记物的粪便DNA试剂盒检测。该研究采用预先假设和分析的盲法进行,发现在4404例患者中,粪便DNA试剂盒对CRC的灵敏度为51.6%(针对所有分期的CRC),隐血检测试纸 II的灵敏度为12.9%,而假阳性率分别为5.6%和4.8%。
新一代的多靶点粪便检测技术整合了NDRG4和BMP3甲基化标记物、多个KRAS突变和人类血红蛋白免疫分析。每种标记物分别定量,并在预先设定的多因素分析中使用一种算法进行组合。以结肠镜检查作为金标准,比较该技术与一款商业FIT检测(OC FIT- chek Polymedco)的灵敏度和特异度。2011至2012年,在美国和加拿大90个研究中心招募了12776名接受了结肠镜检查的受试者,年龄在50岁到84岁之间(65岁以上设置了样本量权重),9989例受试者资料完整。共发现65例CRC和757例进展期腺瘤或1cm及以上无柄锯齿状息肉。多靶点检测对CRC的灵敏度为92.3%(65例CRC中的60例),FIT的灵敏度为73.8%。多靶点检测对进展期病变的灵敏度为42.4%,FIT的灵敏度为23.8%。多靶点检测对重度不典型增生的灵敏度为69.2%,FIT的灵敏度为46.2%。多靶点检测对1 cm及以上无柄锯齿状息肉的灵敏度为42.4%,FIT的灵敏度为5.1%。以非进展期病变或结肠镜阴性结果为阴性时,多靶点检测和FIT特异度分别为86.6%和94.9%,完全以结肠镜阴性为阴性时,特异度分别为89.8%和96.4%。受试者工作特征(ROC)分析显示,即使降低FIT截断值,提高其灵敏度后,多靶点检测的灵敏度仍高于FIT。该研究的局限性在于未能确定重复检测的结果以及适宜的检查间隔。
总的来说,多靶点检测较FIT对CRC和进展期癌前病变的灵敏度更高,但特异度较低。
2014年,美国食品药品监督管理局批准了多靶点检测用于结直肠筛查。
只有目标人群真正接受了筛查,才能从中获益。当前筛查依从性还存在问题,尤其是低收入和无保险人群。也有人担忧结肠镜筛查的依从性低于粪便检测。一项高质量的RCT发现,在无保险的人群中,通过邮寄FIT试剂盒和后续电话提醒,FIT依从率可达到40.7%。通过邮寄结肠镜检查邀请函和后续电话提醒,结肠镜检查的依从率为24.6%。该试验中常规组的依从率仅为12.1%。
根据患者的CRC风险程度来调整推荐的筛查检测可提高筛查获益。例如,如果一组年轻女性近端肿瘤风险很低,那么推荐乙状结肠镜检查,而不是结肠镜检查(两者都是美国预防服务工作组对一般风险人群筛查的推荐技术),其依从性可能会更好。
一项旨在识别一般风险人群中结肠进展期肿瘤(CRC和进展期腺瘤)高风险与低风险者的研究中,2993人接受了结肠镜筛查,根据年龄、性别、腰围、吸烟和家族史进行分层(高风险家族史人群被排除,如Lynch综合症或腺瘤性结肠息肉病)。训练集结果显示,四组进展期肿瘤的风险分别为:1.92%、4.88%、9.93%和24%。在较低风险的两组中,乙状结肠镜检查可检出70例进展期肿瘤中的51例(73%)。独立验证集所得结果相近。该危险度分类系统能否提高依从性有待确定。
一项在亚洲开展的研究评估了同样基于年龄、性别、吸烟和家族史的风险评估系统联合FIT是否能够检测出哪些人需要进行结肠镜检查。若风险评估系统或FIT任一阳性,即建议行结肠镜检查。该策略可使95%的CRC患者被正确告知应进行结肠镜检查。
In FOBT testing, stool samples are collected and analyzed for the presence of small amounts of blood. The first generation of FOBTs used guaiac-based assays to detect blood, which are less sensitive and less specific than immunochemical-based testing. The now-classic randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that assessed colorectal cancer (CRC) mortality reduction all used guaiac-based testing. The finding of decreased CRC mortality provided a major foundation for recommendations to do CRC screening. The first-generation guaiac-based tests are being replaced by more sensitive and more specific immunochemical tests that have not been—and likely will never be—assessed in RCTs in a no-screening control group.
In this setting, the RCT evidence about guaiac-based testing is reviewed briefly here, with further discussion of how immunochemical FOBT (iFOBT or FIT) may provide improved sensitivity and specificity. Generally, if guaiac FOBT (gFOBT) is acceptable as a screening test (as shown in RCTs), then a strong case can be made for using a more sensitive and more specific test like FIT.
gFOBT collection details vary somewhat for different tests, but they typically involve collection of as many as three different specimens on 3 different days, with small amounts from one specimen smeared by a wooden stick on a card with two windows or otherwise placed in a specimen container.
The guaiac test identifies peroxidase-like activity that is characteristic of human and nonhuman hemoglobin. Thus, the test records blood from ingested meat, upper airway bleeding such as epistaxis, upper gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding, and colonic lesions.
A systematic review regarding evidence of benefit was conducted through the Cochrane Collaboration. It examined all CRC screening randomized trials that involved gFOBT testing done on more than one occasion. The combined results showed that trial participants allocated to screening had a 16% lower CRC mortality (relative risk [RR], 0.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.78–0.90). There was no difference in all-cause mortality between the screened groups and the control groups (RR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.99–1.02). The trials reported a low positive predictive value (PPV) for the FOBT test, suggesting that most positive tests were false positives. The PPV was 5.0% to 18.7% in the trials using nonrehydrated slides (Funen and Nottingham), and it was 0.9% to 6.1% in the trials using rehydrated slides (Goteborg and Minnesota). The report contained no discussion about contamination in the control arms of the trials and no information about treatment by disease stage.
On initial (prevalence) examinations, 1% to 5% of unselected persons tested with gFOBT have positive test results. Of those who tested positive, approximately 2% to 10% had cancer and approximately 20% to 30% had adenomas, depending on how the test was done. Data from RCTs of gFOBT testing are summarized in Table 2.
Four controlled clinical trials have been completed or are in progress to evaluate the efficacy of screening utilizing gFOBT. While more sensitive stool blood tests based on measuring human hemoglobin have been developed (and are discussed later in this summary), results about their performance in RCTs have not been yet reported. For gFOBT, the Swedish trial was a targeted study for individuals aged 60 to 64 years.
The English trial selected candidates from lists of family practitioners.
The Danish trial offered screening to a population aged 45 to 75 years who were randomly assigned to a control or study group.
The Minnesota trial randomly assigned 46,551 men and women aged 50 to 80 years to one of three arms: colorectal cancer screening with gFOBT, rehydrated (with some small percentage of unrehydrated) FOBT every year (n = 15,570), every 2 years (n = 15,587), or control (n = 15,394). This trial demonstrated that annual FOBT screening decreased mortality from CRC by 33% after 18 years of follow-up (RR, 0.67; 95% CI, 0.51–0.83, compared with the control group) and that biennial testing resulted in a 21% relative mortality reduction (RR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.62–0.97).
Some part of the reduction may have been attributed to chance detection of cancer by colonoscopies; rehydration of guaiac test slides greatly increased positivity and consequently increased the number of colonoscopies performed.
Subsequent analyses by the Minnesota investigators using mathematical modeling suggested that for 75% to 84% of the patients, mortality reduction was achieved because of sensitive detection of CRCs by the test; chance detection played a modest role (16%–25% of the reduction).
Nearly 85% of patients with a positive test underwent diagnostic procedures that included colonoscopy or double-contrast barium enema plus flexible sigmoidoscopy (FS). After 18 years of follow-up, the incidence of CRC was reduced by 20% in the annually screened arm and 17% in the biennially screened arm. With follow-up through 30 years, there was a sustained reduction in CRC mortality of 32% in the annually screened arm (RR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.56–0.82) and 22% in the biennially screened arm (RR, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.65–0.93). There was no reduction in all-cause mortality in either screened arm (RR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.99–1.01 for the annually screened arm; and RR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.98–1.01 for the biennially screened arm).
Important information that was not reported includes the treatment of CRC cases by stage by arm and the extent of CRC screening in each arm by FOBT, sigmoidoscopy, or colonoscopy after the completion of the trial protocol.
The English trial allocated approximately 76,000 individuals to each arm. Those in the screened arm were offered nonrehydrated gFOBT testing every 2 years for three to six rounds from 1985 to 1995. At a median follow-up of 7.8 years, 60% completed at least one test, and 38% completed all tests. Cumulative incidence of CRC was similar in both arms, and the trial reported a RR reduction of 15% in CRC mortality (odds ratio [OR], 0.85; 95% CI, 0.74–0.98).
The serious complication rate of colonoscopy was 0.5%. There were five deaths within 30 days of surgery for screen-detected CRC or adenoma in a total of 75,253 individuals screened.
After a median follow-up of 11.8 years, no difference in CRC incidence between the intervention and control groups was observed. The disease-specific mortality rate ratio associated with screening was 0.87 (0.78–0.97; P = .01). The rate ratio for death from all causes was 1.00 (0.98–1.02; P = .79).
When the median follow-up was extended to 19.5 years, there was a 9% reduction in CRC mortality (RR, 0.91; 95% CI, 0.84–0.98) but no reduction in CRC incidence (RR, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.91–1.03), or death from all causes (RR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.99–1.02).
The Danish trial in Funen, Denmark, entered approximately 31,000 individuals into two arms, in which individuals in the screened arm were offered nonrehydrated gFOBT testing every 2 years for nine rounds over a 17-year period. Sixty-seven percent completed the first screen, and more than 90% of individuals invited to each subsequent screen underwent FOBT testing. This trial demonstrated an 18% reduction in CRC mortality at 10 years of follow-up, 15% at 13 years of follow-up (RR, 0.85; 95% CI, 0.73–1.00), and 11% at 17 years of follow-up (RR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.78–1.01). CRC incidence and overall mortality were virtually identical in both arms.
The Swedish trial in Goteborg enrolled all of its 68,308 citizens in the city who were born between 1918 and 1931 and were aged 60 to 64 years, and randomly assigned them to screening and control groups of nearly equal size. Participants in the control group were not contacted and were unaware they were part of the trial. Screening was offered at different frequencies to three different cohorts according to year of birth. Screening was done using the gFOBT Hemoccult-II test after dietary restriction. Nearly 92% of tests were rehydrated. Individuals with a positive test result were invited to an examination consisting of a case history, FS, and double-contrast barium enema. Follow-up ranged from 6 years 7 months to 19 years 5 months, depending on the date of enrollment. The primary endpoint was CRC-specific mortality. The overall screening compliance rate was 70%, and 47.2% of participants completed all screenings. Of the 2,180 participants with a positive test, 1,890 (86.7%) underwent a complete diagnostic evaluation with 104 cancers and 305 adenomas of at least 10 mm detected. In total, there were 721 CRCs (152 Dukes D, 184 Dukes C) in the screening group and 754 CRCs (161 Dukes D, 221 Dukes C) in the control group, with an incidence ratio of 0.96 (95% CI, 0.86–1.06). Deaths from CRC were 252 in the screening group and 300 in the control group, with a mortality ratio of 0.84 (95% CI, 0.71–0.99). This CRC mortality difference emerged after 9 years of follow-up. Deaths from all causes were very similar in the two groups, with a mortality ratio of 1.02 (95% CI, 0.99–1.06).
All trials have shown a more favorable stage distribution in the screened population than in controls (refer to Table 2). Data from the Danish trial indicated that while the cumulative incidence of CRC was similar in the screened and control groups, a higher percentage of CRCs and adenomas were Dukes A and Dukes B lesions in the screened group.
A meta-analysis of all previously reported randomized trials using biennial FOBT showed no overall mortality reduction by gFOBT screening (RR, 1.002; 95% CI, 0.989–1.085). The RR of CRC death in the gFOBT arm was 0.87 (95% CI, 0.8–0.95), and the RR of non–CRC death in the gFOBT group was 1.02 (95% CI, 1.00–1.04; P = .015).
Mathematical models have been constructed to extrapolate the results of screening trials and screening programs for benefit of the general population in community health care delivery settings. These models project that using currently available screening methodology can reduce CRC mortality or increase life expectancy.
Site | Population Size | Positivity Rate (%) | % Cancers Localized | Testing Interval | CRC Mortality Relative Risk (95% CI) | CRC Incidence RR (95% CI) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Screened | Control | ||||||
Minnesota | 48,000 | Unrehydrated: 2.4% | 59 | 53 | Annual | 0.67 (0.51–0.83) | 0.80 (0.70–0.90) |
Rehydrated: 9.8% | Biennial | 0.79 (0.62–0.97) | 0.83 (0.73–0.94) | ||||
United Kingdom | 150,000 | Unrehydrated: 2.1% | 52 | 44 | Biennial | 0.85 (0.74–0.98) | 1.04 (0.95–1.14) |
Denmark | 62,000 | Unrehydrated: 1.0% | 56 | 48 | Biennial | 0.82 (0.68–0.99) | 1.00 (0.87–1.13) |
Sweden | 68,308 | Unrehydrated: 1.9% | 52 | 50 | Varied | 0.84 (0.71–0.99) | 0.96 (0.86–1.06) |
Rehydrated: 5.8% | |||||||
CI = confidence interval; CRC = colorectal cancer; RR = risk ratio. | |||||||
a% Localized = T1–3 N0 M0. |
The immunochemical FOBT (iFOBT or FIT) was developed to detect intact human hemoglobin. The advantage of FIT over gFOBT is that it does not detect hemoglobin from nonhuman dietary sources. Also, FIT does not detect partly digested human hemoglobin that comes from the upper respiratory or GI tract. Preliminary studies of several commercially developed FIT tests define their sensitivity and specificity compared with concurrently performed colonoscopy. The studies also examine these outcomes for different cutpoints, and the benefit of multiple versus single stool samples.
Overall, FIT testing is much more sensitive than gFOBT, and it is more sensitive for cancers than for benign neoplasias. As expected, higher cutpoints decrease sensitivity and increase specificity. Fecal immunochemical tests may vary with regard to numbers of stools tested and cutoff values for a positive result.
A systematic review of FIT studies in 2019 found 31 studies, with 120,255 participants and 18 types of FIT tests, that used screening colonoscopy as the reference standard, thus allowing calculation of test sensitivity and specificity.
Performance depended on the threshold for a positive result, so that a threshold of 10 µg/g (micrograms of hemoglobin per gram of feces) resulted in a CRC sensitivity of 0.91 (95% CI, 0.84–0.95) and a specificity of 0.90 (95% CI, 0.86–0.93), while a threshold greater than 20 µg/g resulted in a sensitivity of 0.71 (95% CI, 0.56–0.83) with specificity of 0.95 (95% CI, 0.94–0.96). For advanced adenomas, at a threshold of 10 µg/g, sensitivity was 0.40 (95% CI, 0.33–0.47) with a specificity of 0.90 (95% CI, 0.87–0.93). Comparison of three FITS at three thresholds was inconclusive because CI's overlapped and the comparisons were across rather than within studies. Overall, FIT appears to provide a substantially improved sensitivity compared with gFOBT, although with some compromise in specificity.
The diagnostic sensitivity of FIT testing may vary depending on lesion location in the colon. Right-sided lesions may be harder to detect for several reasons, including that they may arise from serrated lesions that are flat and, because they are less vascular than traditional adenomas, tend to bleed less frequently. In a population-based screening program of every-other-year FIT (set to detect 100 ng of hemoglobin per mL of buffer) testing, individuals who had six FITs over time were assessed to learn the frequency with which proximal and distal lesions were discovered.
Over 12 years (2002–2014), 123,000 participants had 441,000 FITs. The detection rate for proximal colon cancer declined only from the first to the second screening round (0.63–0.36 per 1,000 screened participants), while the rate for both distal colon and rectal cancer decreased across all six rounds (distal cancer, 1.65 in the first round to 0.17 in the sixth round). (Similar trends occurred for advanced adenomas.) The proportional interval cancer rate—the number of cancers observed versus expected—was higher in the proximal colon than in the distal (25.2% vs. 6.0%), suggesting that many proximal cancers (or their immediate precursors) may have been missed by FIT. These results suggest that FIT is less sensitive for right-sided CRC and certainly for advanced adenomas, although it is possible that the miss rate may have been inflated if colonoscopy done in response to a positive FIT had missed a precursor lesion. Overall, these results raise questions about the degree of efficacy of FIT in preventing right-sided CRC mortality.
The performance and acceptability of FIT over time was assessed by Kaiser-Permanente of Northern and Southern California in a screening program. A retrospective cohort of 323,349 persons aged 50 to 70 years was followed for up to four screening rounds over 4 years. Of patients invited, participation in round one was 48.2%, and of those remaining eligible, 75.3% to 86.1% participated in subsequent rounds. The authors reported that “programmatic FIT screening detected 80.4% of patients with CRC diagnosed within 1 year of testing, including 84.5% in round one and 73.4% to 78.0% in subsequent rounds.” An important observation was the degree of participation found. One limitation of the study is that it was not clear how work-up bias was addressed; e.g., when individuals with a positive test result are preferentially worked up to ascertain the presence or absence of CRC, while individuals with a negative test, but who might have CRC, are not. Although a look-back method was used to ascertain whether an individual had cancer, it is not clear that the duration of follow-up was long enough to discover everyone who should have been included in the denominator of the sensitivity calculation. Nevertheless, the results suggested that subsequent FIT results were at least partially independent of previous results. Longer follow-up may help clarify this issue. Mortality reduction could not be assessed in this study.
Potential false-positive test results due to an increased risk of upper GI bleeding are of concern with FOBT testing and pretest protocols, therefore; low-dose aspirin regimens are discontinued for a week or more before FOBT. The performance of FIT was tested in an ongoing diagnostic study (2005–2009) at 20 internal medicine GI practices in southern Germany. Nineteen hundred seventy-nine patients (233 regular low-dose aspirin users and 1,746 never users) were identified in the records for inclusion in the analysis. All patients provided one stool sample taken within a week before colonoscopy preparation, which was collected according to instructions in a container that was kept refrigerated or frozen until rendered to the clinic on the day of colonoscopy, and the patients agreed to complete a standard questionnaire regarding the use of analgesics and low-dose aspirin (for prevention of cardiovascular disease). Stool samples were thawed within a median of 4 days after arrival at the central laboratory (shipped frozen from the recipient clinics). Fecal occult blood levels were measured by two automated FIT tests according to the manufacturer’s instructions (RIDASCREEN Haemoglobin and RIDASCREEN Haemo-/Haptoglobin Complex, r-biopharm, Bensheim, Germany) following clinical procedures and blinded to colonoscopy results. Advanced neoplasms were found in 24 aspirin users (10.3%) and in 181 nonusers (10.4%). At the cutpoint recommended by the manufacturer, sensitivities for the two tests were 70.8% (95% CI, 48.9%–87.4%) for users compared with 35.9% (95% CI, 28.9%–43.4%) for nonusers and 58.3% (95% CI, 36.6%–77.9%) for users compared with 32% (95% CI, 25.3%–39.4%) for nonusers (P = .001 and P = .01, respectively). Specificities were 85.7% (95% CI, 80.2–90.1%) for users compared with 89.2% (95% CI, 87.6%–90.7%) for nonusers and 85.7% (95% CI, 80.2%–90.1%) for users compared with 91.1% (95% CI, 89.5%–92.4%) for nonusers (P = .13 and P = .01, respectively). For these FITs, sensitivity for advanced neoplasms was notably higher with the use of low-dose aspirin while specificity was only slightly reduced, suggesting that there might be an advantage to aspirin use to increase sensitivity without much decrease in specificity.
The flexible fiberoptic sigmoidoscope was introduced in 1969. The 60 cm flexible sigmoidoscope became available in 1976.
The flexible sigmoidoscope permits a more complete examination of the distal colon with more acceptable patient tolerance than the older rigid sigmoidoscope. The rigid instrument can discover 25% of polyps, and the 60 cm scope can find as many as 65% of them. The finding of an adenoma by FS may warrant a colonoscopy to evaluate the more proximal portion of the colon.
The prevalence of advanced proximal neoplasia is increased in patients with a villous or tubulovillous adenoma distally and is also increased in those aged 65 years or older with a positive family history of CRC and with multiple distal adenomas.
Most of these adenomas are polypoid, flat, and depressed lesions, which may be somewhat more prevalent than previously recognized.
Four major sigmoidoscopy screening RCTs have reported incidence and mortality results (a fifth, the Telemark trial in Norway, was very small, with 800 total participants). These are the Norwegian Colorectal Cancer Prevention (NORCCAP) trial; the United Kingdom Flexible Sigmoidoscopy Screening Trial (UKFSST); the Screening for COlon REctum (SCORE) trial in Italy; and the U.S. Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial (refer to Table 3). Participants were aged 55 to 74 years in PLCO, and aged 55 to 64 years in the other three trials. Together, the trials enrolled 166,000 participants in the screened groups and 250,000 participants in the control groups. Median follow-up was approximately 11 years for each group. Results were summarized in three systematic reviews. There was an 18% relative reduction in CRC incidence (RR, 0.82; 95% CI, 0.75–0.89), an overall 28% relative reduction in CRC mortality (RR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.65–0.80), a 31% relative reduction in the incidence of left-sided CRC (RR, 0.69; 95% CI, 0.63–0.74), and a 46% relative reduction in the mortality of left-sided CRC (RR, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.43–0.67).
A meta-analysis showed a statistically significant, although clinically small, effect on all-cause mortality (RR, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.96–0.99).
Three of the above four trials published long-term follow-up analyses of trial results. For UKFSST, median follow-up was 17.1 years. The RRs for CRC incidence and mortality were similar to those originally reported: an RR of 0.70 (95% CI, 0.62–0.79) for CRC mortality and an RR of 0.74 (95% CI, 0.70–0.80) for CRC incidence. For the PLCO trial, median follow-up was 15.8 years for incidence and 16.8 years for mortality; RRs were 0.75 (95% CI, 0.66–0.85) for CRC mortality and 0.82 (95% CI, 0.76–0.88) for CRC incidence. Median follow-up in the NORCCAP trial was approximately 15 years; HRs were 0.79 (95% CI, 0.65–0.96) for CRC mortality and 0.78 (95% CI, 0.70–0.87) for CRC incidence.
The United Kingdom trial published an extended follow-up analysis in 2017, with median follow-up of 17.1 years. The RRs for CRC incidence and mortality were similar to those originally reported: RR of 0.70 (95% CI, 0.62–0.79) for CRC mortality and RR of 0.74 (95% CI, 0.70–0.80) for CRC incidence.
There are no strong direct data from studies of sigmoidoscopy to determine the optimal frequency of screening tests in programs of screening.
Site | Population Size (Intervention) | FSG Rate (%) | Colonoscopy Rate (%) | Cumulative CRC Incidence (%) | CRC Deaths per 100,000 Person-Years | CRC Mortality Relative Risk (95% CI) | Distal CRC Mortality Relative Risk (95% CI) | CRC Incidence Relative Risk (95% CI) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom 2010 | Intervention: 57,099 | 71.1 | 5.0 | 1.5 | Intervention: 30 | 0.69 (0.59–0.80) | 0.58 (0.46–0.74) | 0.77 (0.70–0.84) |
Control: 112,939 | Control: 44 | |||||||
Italy 2011 | Intervention: 17,136 | 57.8 | 7.8 | 1.6 | Intervention: 35 | 0.78 (0.56–1.08) | 0.73 (0.47–1.12) | 0.82 (0.69–0.96) |
Control: 17,136 | Control: 44 | |||||||
United States 2012 | Intervention: 77,445 | 86.6 | 25.3 | 1.5 | Intervention: 29 | 0.74 (0.63–0.87) | 0.50 (0.38–0.64) | 0.79 (0.72–0.85) |
Control: 77,455 | Control: 39 | |||||||
Norway 2014 | Intervention: 20,572d | 63.0 | 19.5 | 1.4 | Intervention: 31 | 0.73 (0.56–0.94) | 0.87 (0.61–0.043) | 0.80 (0.70–0.92) |
Control: 78,220 | Control: 43 | |||||||
CI = confidence interval; CRC = colorectal cancer; FSG = flexible sigmoidoscopy; % = percent. | ||||||||
aAdapted from Lin et al. | ||||||||
bThe FSG rate refers to the % of individuals who received FSG in the screened group. | ||||||||
cThe colonoscopy rate refers to the % of individuals who received a colonoscopy as a follow-up to a positive sigmoidoscopy among those who received a sigmoidoscopy. In the U.S. study, individuals with a polyp found at the time of a sigmoidoscopy were referred for diagnostic follow-up, which was generally done with a colonoscopy. In the other studies, the referral criteria for a colonoscopy depended on the histology of lesion(s) found at the time of the sigmoidoscopy. | ||||||||
d Half of the intervention group was also offered FOBT. | ||||||||
eThese data are from Lin et al., eFigure 1. Forest plot of randomized controlled trials of FS screening on distal CRC mortality. |
A combination of FOBT and sigmoidoscopy might increase the detection of lesions in the left colon (compared with sigmoidoscopy alone) while also increasing the detection of lesions in the right colon. Sigmoidoscopy detects lesions in the left colon directly but detects lesions in the right colon only indirectly when a positive sigmoidoscopy (that may variously be defined as a finding of advanced adenoma, any adenoma, or any polyp) is used to trigger a colonoscopic examination of the whole colon.
In 2,885 veterans (97% male; mean age, 63 years), the prevalence of advanced adenoma at colonoscopy was 10.6%. The estimate was that combined screening with one-time FOBT and sigmoidoscopy would detect 75.8% (95% CI, 71.0%–80.6%) of advanced neoplasms. Examination of the rectum and sigmoid colon during colonoscopy was defined as a surrogate for sigmoidoscopy. This represented a small but statistically insignificant increase in the rate of detection of advanced neoplasia when compared with FS alone (70.3%; 95% CI, 65.2%–75.4%). The latter result could be achieved assuming that all patients with an adenoma in the distal colon undergo complete colonoscopy. Advanced neoplasia was defined as a lesion measuring at least 10 mm in diameter, containing 25% or more villous histology, high-grade dysplasia, or invasive cancer.
One-time use of FOBT differs from the annual or biennial application reported in those studies summarized in Table 2.
A study of 21,794 asymptomatic persons (72% were men), who had both colonoscopy and FIT for occult blood, compared the detection of right-sided cancers as triggered by different test results. FIT alone resulted in a sensitivity of 58.3% and a specificity of 94.5% for proximal cancer diagnosis. FIT plus the finding of advanced neoplasia in the rectosigmoid colon yielded a sensitivity of 62.5% and a specificity of 93%. In this study, the addition of sigmoidoscopy to FIT did not substantially improve the detection of right-sided colon cancers, compared with FIT alone.
Because there are no completed RCTs of colonoscopy, evidence of benefit is indirect. Most indirect evidence is about detection rate of lesions that may be clinically important (like early CRC or advanced adenomas). Some case-control results are available. Three RCTs (NCT01239082, NCT00883792, and NCT00906997) of colonoscopy have been initiated.
The Nordic-European Initiative on Colorectal Cancer (NordICC) is a population-based randomized trial to investigate the effectiveness of colonoscopy screening on CRC incidence and mortality in several European countries (Norway, Poland, Sweden, and the Netherlands). NordICC comprises 94,959 men and women aged 55 to 64 years who were randomly selected from population registers and randomly assigned in a 1:2 ratio to one time colonoscopy screening or no screening. Control participants were not contacted. The primary endpoint is a comparison of the 15-year CRC mortality rates. Participation rates, participant experience, lesion yield, and complications of colonoscopy screening in the participating countries have been reported.Among 31,420 eligible participants randomly assigned to colonoscopy, 12,574 (40.0%) underwent screening. Participation rates were 60.7% in Norway (5354 of 8,816), 39.8% in Sweden (486 of 1,222), 33.0% in Poland (6,004 of 18,188), and 22.9% in the Netherlands (730 of 3,194). The cecum intubation rate of 97.2% was very similar across countries, with 9,726 participants (77.4%) not receiving sedation—10.8% in Norway rising to 90% in the Netherlands. Among the 12,574 screened participants, there was one perforation (0.01%), two postpolypectomy serosal burns (0.02%), and 18 cases of bleeding caused by polypectomy (0.14%). Sixty-two individuals (0.5%) were diagnosed with CRC (50 distal and 14 proximal) and 3,861 (30.7%) had adenomas. There were 725 (5.8%) distal versus 562 (4.5%) high-risk adenomas, and 2,439 (19.4%) distal versus 1,078 (8.6%) proximal serrated polyps. Performance differed significantly among endoscopists; recommended benchmarks for cecal intubation (95%) were not met by 17.1% of endoscopists and benchmarks for adenoma detection (25%) were not met by 28.6% of endoscopists. Moderate or severe abdominal pain after colonoscopy was reported by 16.7% of participants examined with standard air insufflation versus 4.2% examined with carbon dioxide (CO2) insufflation.
In a colonoscopy study of 3,121 predominantly male U.S. veterans (mean age, 63 years), advanced neoplasia (defined as an adenoma that was ≥10.0 mm in diameter, a villous adenoma, an adenoma with high-grade dysplasia, or invasive cancer) was identified in 10.5% of the individuals.
Among patients with no adenomas distal to the splenic flexure, 2.7% had advanced proximal neoplasia. Patients with large adenomas (≥10.0 mm) or small adenomas (<10.0 mm) in the distal colon were more likely to have advanced proximal neoplasia (OR, 3.4; 90% CI, 1.8–6.5) than were patients with no distal adenomas (OR, 2.6; 90% CI, 1.7–4.1). One-half of those with advanced proximal neoplasia had no distal adenomas. In a study of 1,994 adults (aged 50 years or older) who underwent colonoscopy screening (as part of a program sponsored by an employer), 5.6% had advanced neoplasms.
Forty-six percent of those with advanced proximal neoplasms had no distal polyps (hyperplastic or adenomatous). If colonoscopy screening is performed only in patients with distal polyps, about half the cases of advanced proximal neoplasia will not be detected.
A study of colonoscopy in women compared the yield of sigmoidoscopy versus colonoscopy. Of the 1,463 women, cancer was found in 1 woman and advanced colonic neoplasia was found in 72 women (4.9%), which is about 50% of the prevalence in men. The authors focused, however, on RR (i.e., RR of missing an advanced neoplasm) as the outcome, instead of absolute risk of such neoplasms, which is substantially lower in women. In addition, the natural history of advanced neoplasia is not known, so its importance as an outcome in studies of detection is not clear.
Analysis of data from a colonoscopy-based screening program in Warsaw, Poland demonstrated higher rates of advanced neoplasia in men than in women. Of the 43,042 participants aged 50 to 66 years, advanced neoplasia was detected in 5.9% (5.7% in women with a family history of CRC, 4.3% in women without a family history of CRC, 12.2% in men with a family history of CRC, and 8.0% in men without a family history of CRC). Clinically significant complications requiring medical intervention were rare (0.1%), consisting of five perforations, 13 episodes of bleeding, 22 cardiovascular events, and 11 other events over the entire population of 50,148 screened persons. There were no deaths. The authors also reported that collection of 30-day complications data was not systematic; therefore, the data may not be reliable.
Flat or difficult-to-detect lesions include serrated polyps, which may be more common in the right colon than in the left. The term serrated polyp is currently used to include hyperplastic polyps, sessile serrated adenomas, traditional serrated adenomas, and mixed serrated polyps.
The clinical significance of these lesions is uncertain because the natural history of any polypoid lesion is difficult to learn. However, the histologic and molecular characteristics of some serrated lesions suggest possibly important malignant potential (e.g., mutations in the BRAF gene may be an early step toward carcinogenesis in serrated polyps).
This potential, along with the challenges of detecting flat lesions, may partially account for recent reports of a colonoscopy's lesser protective effect in the right colon compared to the left colon.
In 2011, authors of one study reported variability of detection rates for proximal serrated polyps. They studied 15 colonoscopists on faculty at one university and showed, during the years 2000 to 2009 and observed a wide variation in detection rates for proximal serrated polyps, ranging (per colonoscopy) from 0.01 to 0.26, suggesting that many proximal serrated lesions may be missed on routine exam.
The overall proportion of polyps that are serrated is unknown, in part because these lesions have been unappreciated and/or difficult to identify.
Detection rates in colonoscopy screening vary with the rate at which the endoscopist examines the colon while withdrawing the scope. In one study, there were differences among gastroenterologists in the rates of detection of adenomas (range of the mean number of lesions per patient screened, 0.10–1.05; range of the percentage of patients with adenomas, 9.4%–23.7%) and the times of withdrawal of the scope (3.1–16.8 minutes for procedures not including polyp removal). Examiners whose mean withdrawal time was 6 minutes or more had higher detection rates than those with mean withdrawal times of less than 6 minutes (28.3% vs. 11.8%; P < .001 for any neoplasia and 6.4% vs. 2.6%; P < .005 for advanced neoplasia).
In the first 10 years of the German CRC screening program, detection of nonadvanced adenomas increased in men from 13.3% to 22.3% and in women from 8.4% to 14.9%. The great majority of the nonadvanced adenomas, however, were small (<0.5 cm) and had uncertain clinical significance. The detection of advanced adenomas and CRC increased by a much smaller amount. Overall detection rate of adenomas and cancer may be affected by how thoroughly endoscopists search for flat adenomas and flat cancer. While the phenomenon of flat neoplasms has been appreciated for years in Japan, it has more recently been described in the United States. In a study in which endoscopists used high-resolution white-light endoscopes, flat or nonpolypoid lesions were found to account for only 11% of all superficial colon lesions, but these flat or nonpolypoid lesions were about 9.8 times as likely as polypoid lesions to contain cancer (in situ neoplasia or invasive cancer).
However, because the definition of flat or nonpolypoid was height less than one-half of the diameter, it is likely that many lesions classified as nonpolypoid in this study would be routinely found and described by U.S. endoscopists as sessile. The existence of very flat or depressed lesions—depressed lesions are very uncommon but are highly likely to contain cancer—requires that endoscopists pay increasing attention to this problem.
Flat lesions may play a role in the phenomenon of missed cancers.
The impact of ADRs was assessed by a health maintenance organization in follow-up after 314,872 colonoscopies done from 1998 to 2010 by 136 gastroenterologists, each of whom had done at least 300 colonoscopies during that period. The goal was to determine rates of interval CRC, interval advanced CRC, and CRC death, and to relate those rates to a gastroenterologist’s ADR. There were 712 interval cancers (155 advanced) and 147 CRC deaths. The risk of interval cancer from lowest-to-highest quintile of ADR was 9.8, 8.6, 8.0, 7.0, and 4.8 per 10,000 person-years of follow-up. The adjusted HR, for physicians in the highest quintile compared with the lowest, was 0.52 for any interval CRC, 0.43 for advanced CRC, and 0.38 for fatal CRC. Each 1.0% increase in ADR was associated with a 3% decrease in risk of cancer, although the CI for each quintile was broad. Limitations of the study include the inability to determine which specific feature of ADR led to reduced interval cancer; for example, it is unclear whether it was due to the following:
Another limitation is that the harms of a colonoscopy associated with ADR could not be measured.
Although there is no RCT to assess reduction of CRC incidence or mortality by colonoscopy, some case-control evidence is available. Based on case-control data about sigmoidoscopy, noted above, it has been speculated in the past that protection for the right colon might be similar to that found for the left colon. A 2009 case-control study of colonoscopy raised questions about whether the impact of colonoscopy on right-sided lesions might be different than the impact on left-sided lesions.
Using a province-wide administrative database in Ontario, Canada, investigators compared cases of persons who had received a diagnosis of CRC from 1996 to 2001 and had died by 2003. Controls were selected from persons who did not die of CRC. Billing claims were used to assess exposure to previous colonoscopy. The OR for the association between complete colonoscopy and left-sided lesions was 0.33, suggesting a substantial mortality reduction. For right-sided lesions, however, the OR of 0.99 indicated virtually no mortality reduction. However, this study had limited data about whether examinations were complete to the cecum and about bowel prep. Further, many endoscopists were nongastroenterologists.
A case-control study assessed CRC reduction (not CRC mortality reduction) in the right side versus the left side. In a population-based study from Germany, data were obtained from administrative records and medical records; 1,688 case patients (with CRC) were compared with 1,932 participants (without CRC), aged 50 years or older.
Data were collected about demographics, risk factors, and previous screening examinations. According to colonoscopy records, the cecum was reached 91% of the time. Colonoscopy in the previous 10 years was associated with an OR for any CRC of 0.23, for right-sided CRC of 0.44, and for left-sided CRC of 0.16. While this study did not assess CRC mortality, the results suggested that the magnitude of the right-side versus the left-side difference may be smaller than previously found.
It would be extremely useful to assess right side-versus left side differences in a RCT.
Other case-control data suggest a reduction of CRC incidence on the right-side of about 64% compared with about 74% on the left-side.
Because there is no RCT evidence and case-control evidence is limited, it is important to consider the degree of mortality reduction from colonoscopy. While a figure of 90% is sometimes cited as the degree of mortality reduction, the question will not be properly answered until the European RCT that has a control group of “routine care” that involves minimal screening of any kind is completed.
Until there are more reliable results from colonoscopy RCTs, studies of FS may provide the best estimate of CRC mortality incidence reduction, of at most 50% on the left-colon, by extending efficacy on the left-colon to the right-colon.
Virtual colonoscopy (also known as CTC or CT pneumocolon) refers to the examination of computer-generated images of the colon constructed from data obtained from an abdominal CT examination. These images simulate the effect of a conventional colonoscopy. Patients must take laxatives to clean the colon before the procedure, and the colon is insufflated with air (sometimes carbon dioxide) by insertion of a rectal tube just before radiographic examination.
A large, paired-design study was conducted by the American College of Radiology Imaging Network group, with 2,531 average-risk people (prevalence of polyps or cancer ≥10 mm, 4%; mean age about 58 years) screened with both CTC and optical colonoscopy (OC). The gold standard was the OC, including repeat OC exams for people with lesions found by CTC but not by OC. Of 109 people with at least one adenoma or cancer 10 mm or larger, 98 (90%) were detected by CTC (referring everyone with a CTC lesion of ≥5 mm). Specificity was 86%, and PPV was 23%. There are several concerns from this study, including the following:
Unknowns from the study include the following for either OC or CTC:
Another study reported similar sensitivity and specificity in persons with an increased risk of CRC.
In this study, the sensitivity of OC could not be determined because it was done in an unblinded manner. This study suggested that virtual colonoscopy might be an acceptable screening or surveillance test for persons with a high risk of CRC, but this cross-sectional study did not address outcome or frequency of testing in high-risk persons.
Some studies have assessed how well virtual colonoscopy can detect colorectal polyps without a laxative prep. The question is of great importance for implementation because the laxative prep required by both conventional colonoscopy and virtual colonoscopy is considered a great disadvantage by patients. By tagging feces with iodinated contrast material ingested during several days before the procedure, investigators in one study were able to detect lesions larger than 8 mm with 95% sensitivity and 92% specificity.
The particular tagging material used in this study caused about 10% of patients to become nauseated; however, other materials are being assessed.
Another study
utilized low-fiber diet, orally ingested contrast, and "electronic cleansing," a process that subtracts tagged feces. CTC identified 91% of persons with adenomas 10 mm or larger, but detected fewer (70%) lesions of at least 8 mm. Patients who received both CTC and OC preferred CTC to OC (290 vs. 175). This study shows that CTC without a laxative prep detects small 1 cm lesions with high sensitivity and is acceptable to patients. Long-term utilization of CTC will depend on several issues, including the frequency of follow-up exams that would be needed to detect smaller lesions that were undetected and may grow over time.
Extracolonic abnormalities are common in CTC. Fifteen percent of patients in an Australian series of 100 patients, referred for colonography because of symptoms or family history, were found to have extracolonic findings, and 11% of the patients needed further medical workups for renal, splenic, uterine, liver, and gallbladder abnormalities.
In another study, 59% of 111 symptomatic patients referred for clinical colonoscopy in a Swedish hospital between June 1998 and September 1999 were found to have moderate or major extracolonic conditions on CTC. CTC was performed immediately before a colonoscopy and these findings required further evaluation. The extent to which follow-up of these incidental findings benefited patients is unknown.
Sixty-nine percent of 681 asymptomatic patients in Minnesota had extracolonic findings, of which 10% were considered to be highly important by the investigators, and required further medical workup. Suspected abnormalities involved kidney (34), chest (22), liver (8), ovary (6), renal or splenic arteries (4), retroperitoneum (3), and pancreas (1); however, the extent to which these findings will contribute to benefits or harms is uncertain. Two other studies, one large (N = 2,195) and one small (n = 136) examined the moderate or high importance of extracolonic findings from CTC. The larger study found that 8.6% of patients had an extracolonic finding of at least moderate importance, while 24% of patients in the smaller study required some evaluation for an extracolonic finding. The larger study found nine cancers from these evaluations, at a partial cost (they did not include all costs) of $98.56 per patient initially screened. The smaller study found no important lesions from evaluation, at a cost of $248 per person screened. Both of these estimates of cost are higher than previous studies have found. The extent to which any patients benefited from the detection of extracolonic findings is not clear. Because both of these studies were conducted in academic medical centers, the generalizability to other settings is also not clear. Neither of these studies examined the effect of extracolonic findings on patient anxiety and psychological function.
Technical improvements involving both the interpretation methodology, such as three dimensional (3-D) imaging, and bowel preparation are under study in many centers. While specificity for detection of polyps is homogeneously high in many studies, sensitivity can vary widely. These variations are attributable to a number of factors including characteristics of the CT scanner and detector, width of collimation, mode of imaging (two dimensional [2-D] vs. 3-D and/or fly-through), and variability in the expertise of radiologists.
A case-control study reported that routine digital rectal examination was not associated with any statistically significant reduction in mortality from distal rectal cancer.
The molecular genetic changes that are associated with the development of colorectal adenomas and carcinoma have been well characterized.
Advanced techniques have been developed to detect several of these gene mutations that have been shed into the stool.
Stool DNA testing was recently assessed in a prospective study of asymptomatic persons who received colonoscopy, three-card FOBT (Hemoccult II), and stool DNA testing based on a panel of markers assessing 21 mutations. Conducted in a blinded way with prestated hypotheses and analyses, the study found that among 4,404 patients, the DNA panel had a sensitivity for CRC of 51.6% (for all stages of CRC) versus 12.9% for Hemoccult II, while the false-positive rates were 5.6% and 4.8%, respectively.
A next-generation multitargeted stool test combined methylation markers for NDRG4 and BMP3, several KRAS mutations, and a human hemoglobin immunoassay. The markers, each quantitated separately, were combined using an algorithm in a prespecified multivariable analysis. The assay’s sensitivity and specificity were compared with a commercial FIT test (OC FIT-CHEK Polymedco), using colonoscopy as the gold standard. Among 12,776 participants who had colonoscopy screening, were enrolled from 2011 through 2012 at 90 sites in the United States and Canada, and were aged 50 to 84 years (and weighted toward >65 years), 9,989 had fully evaluable results. There were 65 CRC and 757 advanced adenomas or sessile serrated polyps 1 cm or greater. The sensitivity for CRC was 92.3% (60 of 65 CRC) for the multitargeted test and 73.8% for FIT. Sensitivity for advanced lesions was 42.4% for the multitargeted test and 23.8% for FIT. Sensitivity for high-grade dysplasia was 69.2% for the multitarget test and 46.2% for FIT. Sensitivity for serrated sessile polyps 1 cm or greater was 42.4% for the multitargeted test and 5.1% for FIT. Specificities were 86.6% for the multitargeted test and 94.9% for FIT, using nonadvanced or negative colonoscopy results, and were 89.8% and 96.4% for totally negative colonoscopy results. A receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis showed that the multitargeted test has higher sensitivity than FIT alone, even if the FIT cutoff is reduced to try to increase sensitivity. A limitation is that there were no data about performance of repeated testing over time and what may be an appropriate testing interval.
Overall, the multitargeted test was more sensitive than FIT for both CRC and advanced precancerous lesions, but the test was less specific.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved this multitargeted test for colorectal screening in 2014.
Benefit from CRC screening can only occur if eligible people are actually screened. There have been problems with screening adherence, particularly for low income and uninsured people. There has also been concern that some people may adhere less to screening with a colonoscopy than with fecal tests. One well-conducted RCT found that, among an uninsured population, mailed FIT-kit outreach and follow-up reminder phone calls resulted in an adherence rate of 40.7%. Mailed colonoscopy invitations and follow-up phone reminders resulted in a 24.6% adherence rate. The usual-care adherence rate in this trial was 12.1%.
Benefit of screening might be improved by tailoring the recommended screening test to a person’s degree of CRC risk. For example, if a subgroup of young women were to have a substantially lower risk of proximal neoplasms, then recommending sigmoidoscopy instead of colonoscopy (both are recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force without preference, as part of a program of screening persons with average risk) might lead to higher compliance.
In a study to identify persons in an average-risk group who had a higher versus lower risk of advanced neoplasia (CRC and advanced adenomas) anywhere in the colon, 2,993 persons having a screening colonoscopy were stratified by age, gender, waist circumference, smoking, and family history (persons in high-risk family categories, e.g., Lynch syndrome or adenomatous polyposis coli, were excluded). In a classification system derived in a training set, the risks of advanced neoplasm in four groups were: 1.92%, 4.88%, 9.93%, and 24%. In the two lowest risk groups, sigmoidoscopy would have detected 51 (73%) of 70 advanced neoplasms. In the independent validation set, results were similar. Whether this system increases overall compliance has yet to be determined.
A similar stratification system based on age, gender, smoking, and family history—and combined with FIT—was tested in Asia to determine whether use of the stratification system plus FIT could detect which persons need colonoscopy. If either the stratification system or FIT was positive, a person was recommended for colonoscopy. Using this strategy, 95% of persons with CRC were correctly told to have colonoscopy.
潜在的危害与结直肠癌(CRC)筛查技术有关,部分证据明确,部分则证据不足。
下表汇总了各筛查技术在筛查过程中可能发生的几种危害及其程度。危害程度根据其发生频率和严重程度,由患者报告。
广义上的危害定义为:与未筛查相比,参与筛查过程(进程)对个体或群体产生的任何负面影响。潜在危害根据危害类型可以分为身体、精神、困扰/机会成本等,也可以根据筛查流程的不同环节,分为筛查/诊断检查过程本身、筛查/诊断结果、监测及监测结果、以及早期治疗和过度治疗等。例如,结肠镜筛查的潜在危害包括筛查技术本身(如穿孔和出血)、筛查结果(如异常结果引起的焦虑)、监测(如更频繁的结肠镜检查)和治疗(如早期治疗或过度治疗)。对于其他的筛查技术,还包括诊断性检查(如粪便隐血检测阳性[FOBT]后进行结肠镜检查)。最近一项针对三家医院的研究发现,71%的内窥镜在清洁和高度消毒后细菌检测仍呈阳性。研究结果引发了对内窥镜检查相关病原传播和患者安全的高度关注,尽管没有病人参与研究,对病人的影响尚不清楚。
在参与筛查的各个环节中,参与者都需付出时间/精力和机会成本(非财务损失)。本文未纳入患者及其家庭的任何经济损失,也未纳入对与筛查相关的未来经济成本的预期造成的任何精神伤害。
筛查进程 | |||
---|---|---|---|
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查/诊断检查 | 平均0.3%的并发症需要住院治疗或导致死亡,息肉切除术和老年患者的发生率更高(证据一般) | 因考虑进行结肠镜检查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 准备、手术、镇静大约需38小时(中位数)(一项研究,证据一般) |
术前准备和手术的不适。术前准备的不良反应。(没有足够的证据来确定强度和频率) | |||
术中镇静引起的并发症(没有足够的证据来确定强度和频率) | |||
筛查/诊断结果 | 确诊后短期内自杀和心血管疾病死亡的风险增加(证据不足) | 收到阳性筛查和/或病理结果后出现精神困扰的受试者百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受和理解筛查或诊断结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而额外就诊(证据不足) |
监测/结果 | 更频繁的结肠镜检查 | 收到阳性筛查结果后出现精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 结肠镜检查所需的时间和精力(中位时间38小时,见上) |
接受和理解监测结果所需的时间和精力(证据不足) | |||
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 对息肉病变的过度诊断和过度治疗或对CRC的早期治疗(可能从早期治疗中获益,也可能不会)(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或早期治疗且未能获益后遭受精神困扰的比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或早期治疗但未能获益所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查技术 | 无(没有证据) | 因考虑进行结直肠癌筛查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 改变饮食(如需要)、收集样本并返回到相应机构所需的时间和精力:证据不足 |
筛查结果 | N/A | 收到阳性结果后出现精神困扰的受试者百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受和理解筛查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而额外就诊或沟通(证据不足) |
诊断 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
诊断结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
监测/结果 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查技术 | 严重并发症平均发生率为0.03%(证据一般) | 因考虑进行结肠镜检查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 肠镜前准备、往返交通、参加筛查以及恢复日常活动所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
筛查结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
诊断 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
监测/结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查方法/诊断性检查 | 检查前准备和检查时的不适;辐射暴露(证据不足) | 考虑接受筛查时有心理困扰者的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 检查前准备和检查过程所需的时间(确切时间和工作量不确定)(证据不足) |
筛查方法/检查结果 | 确诊不久后自杀风险和心血管病死亡率增加(证据不足) | 收到阳性筛查结果和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间。(证据不足) | 接收和理解筛查或检查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而再次就诊(证据不足) |
偶然的结肠外发现 | |||
监测/结果 | 更频繁的结肠镜检查 | 收到阳性筛查和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 结肠镜检查所需的时间和精力(中位数38小时,见上图) |
接收和理解监测结果所需的时间和精力(证据不足) | |||
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 对息肉病变的过度诊断和过度治疗或对CRC的更早治疗(可能从更早治疗中获益,也可能不会)(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗和无收益更早治疗而出现心理困扰的比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或无收益更早治疗所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
CRC=结直肠癌 | |||
CRC=结直肠癌;FIT=免疫化学粪便隐血试验;FOBT=粪便隐血试验;N/A =不适用 | |||
a诊断检查为结肠镜检查。伤害相关描述可参见结肠镜检查章节(更多信息请参见伤害证据汇总的结肠镜检查部分) | |||
b所有筛查技术的治疗副作用相同。 | |||
N/A = 不适用 | |||
a诊断检查为结肠镜检查。伤害相关描述可参见结肠镜检查章节(更多信息请参见伤害证据汇总的结肠镜检查部分) | |||
b所有筛查技术的治疗副作用相同。 | |||
CRC=结直肠癌。 |
筛查进程 | |||
---|---|---|---|
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查技术 | 无(没有证据) | 因考虑进行结直肠癌筛查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 改变饮食(如需要)、收集样本并返回到相应机构所需的时间和精力:证据不足 |
筛查结果 | N/A | 收到阳性结果后出现精神困扰的受试者百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受和理解筛查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而额外就诊或沟通(证据不足) |
诊断 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
诊断结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
监测/结果 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
筛查进程 | |||
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查技术 | 严重并发症平均发生率为0.03%(证据一般) | 因考虑进行结肠镜检查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 肠镜前准备、往返交通、参加筛查以及恢复日常活动所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
筛查结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
诊断 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
监测/结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查方法/诊断性检查 | 检查前准备和检查时的不适;辐射暴露(证据不足) | 考虑接受筛查时有心理困扰者的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 检查前准备和检查过程所需的时间(确切时间和工作量不确定)(证据不足) |
筛查方法/检查结果 | 确诊不久后自杀风险和心血管病死亡率增加(证据不足) | 收到阳性筛查结果和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间。(证据不足) | 接收和理解筛查或检查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而再次就诊(证据不足) |
偶然的结肠外发现 | |||
监测/结果 | 更频繁的结肠镜检查 | 收到阳性筛查和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 结肠镜检查所需的时间和精力(中位数38小时,见上图) |
接收和理解监测结果所需的时间和精力(证据不足) | |||
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 对息肉病变的过度诊断和过度治疗或对CRC的更早治疗(可能从更早治疗中获益,也可能不会)(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗和无收益更早治疗而出现心理困扰的比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或无收益更早治疗所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
CRC=结直肠癌;FIT=免疫化学粪便隐血试验;FOBT=粪便隐血试验;N/A =不适用 | |||
a诊断检查为结肠镜检查。伤害相关描述可参见结肠镜检查章节(更多信息请参见伤害证据汇总的结肠镜检查部分) | |||
b所有筛查技术的治疗副作用相同。 | |||
N/A = 不适用 | |||
a诊断检查为结肠镜检查。伤害相关描述可参见结肠镜检查章节(更多信息请参见伤害证据汇总的结肠镜检查部分) | |||
b所有筛查技术的治疗副作用相同。 | |||
CRC=结直肠癌。 |
筛查进程 | |||
---|---|---|---|
身体的 | 精神的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查技术 | 严重并发症平均发生率为0.03%(证据一般) | 因考虑进行结肠镜检查而产生精神困扰的受试者比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 肠镜前准备、往返交通、参加筛查以及恢复日常活动所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
筛查结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
诊断 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
监测/结果 | N/A | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 | 请参见结肠镜检查部分 |
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 | 请参见结肠镜检查 |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查方法/诊断性检查 | 检查前准备和检查时的不适;辐射暴露(证据不足) | 考虑接受筛查时有心理困扰者的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 检查前准备和检查过程所需的时间(确切时间和工作量不确定)(证据不足) |
筛查方法/检查结果 | 确诊不久后自杀风险和心血管病死亡率增加(证据不足) | 收到阳性筛查结果和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间。(证据不足) | 接收和理解筛查或检查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而再次就诊(证据不足) |
偶然的结肠外发现 | |||
监测/结果 | 更频繁的结肠镜检查 | 收到阳性筛查和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 结肠镜检查所需的时间和精力(中位数38小时,见上图) |
接收和理解监测结果所需的时间和精力(证据不足) | |||
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 对息肉病变的过度诊断和过度治疗或对CRC的更早治疗(可能从更早治疗中获益,也可能不会)(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗和无收益更早治疗而出现心理困扰的比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或无收益更早治疗所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
N/A = 不适用 | |||
a诊断检查为结肠镜检查。伤害相关描述可参见结肠镜检查章节(更多信息请参见伤害证据汇总的结肠镜检查部分) | |||
b所有筛查技术的治疗副作用相同。 | |||
CRC=结直肠癌。 |
级联筛查的阶段 | |||
---|---|---|---|
身体的 | 心理的 | 时间/精力,机会 | |
筛查方法/诊断性检查 | 检查前准备和检查时的不适;辐射暴露(证据不足) | 考虑接受筛查时有心理困扰者的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 检查前准备和检查过程所需的时间(确切时间和工作量不确定)(证据不足) |
筛查方法/检查结果 | 确诊不久后自杀风险和心血管病死亡率增加(证据不足) | 收到阳性筛查结果和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间。(证据不足) | 接收和理解筛查或检查结果所需的时间和精力,包括因阳性结果而再次就诊(证据不足) |
偶然的结肠外发现 | |||
监测/结果 | 更频繁的结肠镜检查 | 收到阳性筛查和/或病理结果后出现心理困扰的百分比;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 结肠镜检查所需的时间和精力(中位数38小时,见上图) |
接收和理解监测结果所需的时间和精力(证据不足) | |||
治疗(早期治疗和过度治疗) | 对息肉病变的过度诊断和过度治疗或对CRC的更早治疗(可能从更早治疗中获益,也可能不会)(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗和无收益更早治疗而出现心理困扰的比例;严重程度和持续时间(证据不足) | 接受过度治疗或无收益更早治疗所需的时间和精力(证据不足) |
CRC=结直肠癌。 |
结肠镜检查的潜在身体危害包括检查前准备和检查过程中的不良反应(结肠穿孔和出血;麻醉的影响)。
一篇系统综述汇总了60项评估无症状患者结肠镜检查并发症的研究结果,发现很少出现严重并发症,包括大出血(0.8/1000例;95%CI,0.18-1.63)和穿孔(0.07/1000例;95%CI,0.006-0.17)以及轻微和短期的心理伤害。
这些并发症可能很严重,需要住院治疗。结肠穿孔和大出血在活检或息肉切除术中更常见,总体上每1000台手术中平均3-5台会发生严重并发症。尽管麻醉本身对身体有潜在伤害,但减少了检查过程中因不适而造成的身体伤害(由于证据不足,其严重程度尚不确定)。
身体伤害也与级联筛查的后续步骤有关,包括CRC的诊断(一些大型生态学研究表明,诊断不久后自杀人数增加了)和由于治疗不会引起患者严重问题的病变而导致的过度诊断/过度治疗(证据不足以确定严重程度)。
结肠镜检查的潜在心理危害包括检查过程中的期盼和在等待活检报告结果时的焦虑。对于患有息肉的人来说,考虑自己患CRC的风险增加,可能会增加困扰(证据不足)。对于新确诊为CRC的患者,因需讨论预后和治疗方法,许多患者会经历至少6个月的焦虑和抑郁(证据不足)。
在整个过程中都存在时间/精力的损失以及满足级联筛查要求所涉及的机会成本(证据不足以确定频率和严重性)。
基于粪便检查的潜在身体危害中包括结肠镜检查的潜在伤害,因为检查阳性者会被转诊行诊断性结肠镜检查。
潜在的心理伤害,以及时间/精力和机会成本也与上述结肠镜检查类似(更多信息请参见本总结“危害证据”章节的结肠镜检查部分)。
无论初筛方法如何,这些危害都与整个筛查过程有关。虽然这些心理伤害、时间/精力和机会成本极有可能发生,但由于证据不足,尚不能确定这些伤害发生的确切频率和严重程度。
乙状结肠镜检查对身体的潜在危害比结肠镜检查少得多,而且准备工作相对简单。每1万例乙状结肠镜检查中约发生3例严重手术并发症,而在结肠镜检查中,每1千例就发生3例。
乙状结肠镜检查通常不需要麻醉,从而进一步降低了并发症的可能性。
乙状结肠镜筛查的潜在心理危害以及筛查的时间/精力和机会成本,与上述其他筛查策略相同。
因CTC检查直接造成的潜在身体伤害比结肠镜检查和乙状结肠镜检查少得多,很少出现手术并发症。
然而,CTC确实涉及反复的辐射暴露,其相关危害尚不明确。CTC还会检测到一些结肠外的其他异常。
40%-98%的CTC有偶然发现,其中数量不等的发现被认为具有临床意义而进行了进一步的诊断性检查。由于少有证据表明早期检测到这些发现可以改善患者的健康结局,这些发现可能被认为有害,除非有证据表明其益处。
CTC的潜在心理伤害或时间/精力和机会成本与上述对经过所有筛查阶段的患者的描述相似(证据不足以确定频率和严重性)。
Potential harms are associated with the modalities used to screen for colorectal cancer (CRC), some of which have sufficient evidence and some that do not.
The tables for each screening test below show the magnitude of burden for several categories of harms encountered along the screening cascade. The magnitude of harms is a combination of the frequency and severity of harm, as perceived by the patient.
Harms are defined broadly as any negative effect on individuals or populations resulting from being involved in the screening process (cascade) compared with not screening. Potential harms are organized according to the type of harm (e.g., physical, psychological, and hassle/opportunity costs) and when they occur in the screening cascade (e.g., screening test/workup; screening test/workup results; surveillance and surveillance results; and early treatment and overtreatment). For example, potential harms of screening colonoscopy include harms of the screening test itself (e.g., perforation and bleeding), results of the screening test (e.g., anxiety from an abnormal result), surveillance (e.g. harms of more frequent colonoscopies), and treatment (e.g. earlier treatment or overtreatment). For other colorectal cancer screening tests, there are also harms associated with the workup (e.g. colonoscopy for positive fecal occult blood test [FOBT]). A recent study of three major hospitals found evidence that 71% of endoscopes tested positive for bacteria after cleaning and high-level disinfection of the scopes. This raises concern for endoscopy-associated pathogen transmission and patient safety, although no patients were involved in the study and the implications for patients are unknown.
For all aspects of participating in the screening cascade, there are time/effort and opportunity costs (nonfinancial harms) for the patient. We do not include here any financial harms to the patient/family, nor any psychological harm from anticipation of future financial costs related to screening.
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
---|---|---|---|
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test/Workup | Average 0.3% complications requiring hospitalization or resulting in death, higher with polypectomy and in older patients (fair evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having colonoscopy; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | About 38 hours (median) time required for preparation, procedure, sedation (one study, fair evidence) |
Discomfort of preparation and procedure. Adverse effects of preparation. (insufficient evidence to determine magnitude and frequency) | |||
Complications from sedation during procedure (insufficient evidence to determine magnitude and frequency) | |||
Screening Test/Workup Results | Increased risk of suicide and cardiovascular mortality soon after diagnosis (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test or workup results, including extra physician visits for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Surveillance/Results | More frequent colonoscopy | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to undergo colonoscopy (38 hours median, see above) |
Time and effort required to receive and understand surveillance results (insufficient evidence) | |||
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | Overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precursor polyps or earlier treatment of CRC (may or may not receive benefit from earlier treatment) (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after undergoing overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit; severity and duration. (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit (insufficient evidence) |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test | None (no evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having CRC screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to change diet (if required), collect samples, and return to appropriate facility: insufficient evidence |
Screening Test Results | N/A | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test results, including extra physician visits or communication for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Workup | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Workup Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Surveillance/Results | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test | Average serious complications for 0.03% of patients (fair evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having colonoscopy; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to perform preparation, travel to and attend screening, return to usual activities (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Workup | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Surveillance/Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test/Workup | Discomfort of preparation and procedure; radiation exposure (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time required for preparation, procedure (exact time and effort uncertain) (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test/Workup Results | Increased risk of suicide and cardiovascular mortality soon after diagnosis (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration. (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test or workup results, including extra physician visits for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Incidental extra-colonic findings | |||
Surveillance/Results | More frequent colonoscopy | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to undergo colonoscopy (38 hours median, see above) |
Time and effort required to receive and understand surveillance results (insufficient evidence) | |||
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | Overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precursor polyps or earlier treatment of CRC (may or may not receive benefit from earlier treatment) (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress undergoing overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit (insufficient evidence) |
CRC = colorectal cancer. | |||
CRC = colorectal cancer; FIT= immunochemical fecal occult blood test; FOBT= fecal occult blood test; N/A = not applicable. | |||
aWorkup test is colonoscopy. Descriptions of the associated harms can be found in the colonoscopy section (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information). | |||
bTreatment harms will be the same for all screening tests. | |||
N/A = not applicable. | |||
aWorkup test is colonoscopy. Descriptions of the associated harms can be found in the colonoscopy section (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information). | |||
bTreatment harms will be the same for all screening test. | |||
CRC = colorectal cancer. |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
---|---|---|---|
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test | None (no evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having CRC screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to change diet (if required), collect samples, and return to appropriate facility: insufficient evidence |
Screening Test Results | N/A | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test results, including extra physician visits or communication for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Workup | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Workup Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Surveillance/Results | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test | Average serious complications for 0.03% of patients (fair evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having colonoscopy; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to perform preparation, travel to and attend screening, return to usual activities (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Workup | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Surveillance/Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test/Workup | Discomfort of preparation and procedure; radiation exposure (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time required for preparation, procedure (exact time and effort uncertain) (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test/Workup Results | Increased risk of suicide and cardiovascular mortality soon after diagnosis (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration. (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test or workup results, including extra physician visits for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Incidental extra-colonic findings | |||
Surveillance/Results | More frequent colonoscopy | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to undergo colonoscopy (38 hours median, see above) |
Time and effort required to receive and understand surveillance results (insufficient evidence) | |||
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | Overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precursor polyps or earlier treatment of CRC (may or may not receive benefit from earlier treatment) (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress undergoing overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit (insufficient evidence) |
CRC = colorectal cancer; FIT= immunochemical fecal occult blood test; FOBT= fecal occult blood test; N/A = not applicable. | |||
aWorkup test is colonoscopy. Descriptions of the associated harms can be found in the colonoscopy section (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information). | |||
bTreatment harms will be the same for all screening tests. | |||
N/A = not applicable. | |||
aWorkup test is colonoscopy. Descriptions of the associated harms can be found in the colonoscopy section (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information). | |||
bTreatment harms will be the same for all screening test. | |||
CRC = colorectal cancer. |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
---|---|---|---|
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test | Average serious complications for 0.03% of patients (fair evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of having colonoscopy; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to perform preparation, travel to and attend screening, return to usual activities (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Workup | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Surveillance/Results | N/A | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy | See colonoscopy |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test/Workup | Discomfort of preparation and procedure; radiation exposure (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time required for preparation, procedure (exact time and effort uncertain) (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test/Workup Results | Increased risk of suicide and cardiovascular mortality soon after diagnosis (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration. (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test or workup results, including extra physician visits for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Incidental extra-colonic findings | |||
Surveillance/Results | More frequent colonoscopy | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to undergo colonoscopy (38 hours median, see above) |
Time and effort required to receive and understand surveillance results (insufficient evidence) | |||
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | Overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precursor polyps or earlier treatment of CRC (may or may not receive benefit from earlier treatment) (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress undergoing overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit (insufficient evidence) |
N/A = not applicable. | |||
aWorkup test is colonoscopy. Descriptions of the associated harms can be found in the colonoscopy section (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information). | |||
bTreatment harms will be the same for all screening test. | |||
CRC = colorectal cancer. |
Stage of Screening Cascade | |||
---|---|---|---|
Physical | Psychological | Time/Effort, Opportunity | |
Screening Test/Workup | Discomfort of preparation and procedure; radiation exposure (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress on consideration of screening; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time required for preparation, procedure (exact time and effort uncertain) (insufficient evidence) |
Screening Test/Workup Results | Increased risk of suicide and cardiovascular mortality soon after diagnosis (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration. (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive and understand screening test or workup results, including extra physician visits for positive tests (insufficient evidence) |
Incidental extra-colonic findings | |||
Surveillance/Results | More frequent colonoscopy | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress after receiving positive screening and/or pathological results; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to undergo colonoscopy (38 hours median, see above) |
Time and effort required to receive and understand surveillance results (insufficient evidence) | |||
Treatment (Early Treatment and Overtreatment) | Overdiagnosis and overtreatment of precursor polyps or earlier treatment of CRC (may or may not receive benefit from earlier treatment) (insufficient evidence) | Percentage of people who suffer psychological distress undergoing overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit; severity and duration (insufficient evidence) | Time and effort required to receive overtreatment or earlier treatment without benefit (insufficient evidence) |
CRC = colorectal cancer. |
The potential physical harms of colonoscopy include adverse effects from the preparation and adverse effects from the procedure (colonic perforation and bleeding; effects of sedation).
A systematic review of 60 studies that assessed complications of colonoscopy screening in asymptomatic patients found infrequent serious morbidity, which comprised major bleeding (0.8/1,000 procedures; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.18–1.63) and perforation (0.07/1,000 procedures; 95% CI, 0.006–0.17), and only minor and short-lasting psychological harms.
These complications can be serious, requiring hospitalization. Colonic perforation and serious bleeding occur more often with biopsy or polypectomy, with an overall average of three to five serious complications per 1,000 procedures. The physical harm of discomfort during the procedure has been reduced by sedation, although sedation has its own potential for physical harm (magnitude and severity uncertain due to insufficient evidence).
Physical harms are also associated with further steps in the screening cascade, including diagnosis of CRC (some large ecologic studies have shown an increase in suicide soon after diagnosis) and overdiagnosis/overtreatment due to treating lesions that would never have caused the patient important problems (evidence insufficient to determine magnitude and severity).
The potential psychological harms of colonoscopy include anticipation of the procedure and anxiety while awaiting the results of biopsy reports. For people with polyps, there may be increased distress in considering oneself at increased risk of CRC (evidence insufficient). For people newly diagnosed with CRC, many will experience increased anxiety and depression for at least 6 months, as prognosis and treatment are discussed (evidence insufficient).
The harm of time/effort and opportunity costs involved in moving through the demands of the screening cascade are present throughout the process (evidence insufficient to determine frequency and severity).
The potential physical harms of fecal-based testing include the same harms as for colonoscopy for people with a positive test who have been referred for diagnostic colonoscopy.
The potential psychological harms, as well as time/effort and opportunity costs are also similar to the description above for colonoscopy (refer to the Colonoscopy section in the Evidence of Harms section of this summary for more information).
These harms are associated with moving through the screening cascade, regardless of the initial screening test. Although it is highly likely that these psychological harms, plus time/effort and opportunity costs, do occur, the exact frequency and severity of these harms are uncertain due to insufficient evidence.
The potential physical harms of sigmoidoscopy are considerably less than those of colonoscopy, with a less intensive preparation. Serious procedural complications occur in perhaps three in 10,000 sigmoidoscopies compared with in three in 1,000 colonoscopies.
There is usually no sedation with sigmoidoscopy, thus again lowering the potential for complications.
The potential psychological harms of sigmoidoscopy screening, as well as the time/effort and opportunity costs of screening, are the same as given above for other screening strategies.
The potential physical harms due directly to the procedure of CTC are less than either colonoscopy or sigmoidoscopy, with rare procedural complications.
However, CTC does involve repeated radiation exposure, with uncertain associated harms, and it also detects a number of extra-colonic incidental findings.
Incidental findings have been detected in between 40% to 98% of CTCs, with a variable number of these considered significant enough to proceed with further diagnostic testing. As there is little evidence that early detection of any of these findings could improve health outcomes for patients, these findings may be considered as harms until proven otherwise.
The potential psychological harms or time/effort and opportunity costs for CTC are similar to the descriptions above for patients moving through the screening cascade (evidence insufficient to determine frequency and severity).
对PDQ癌症信息摘要进行定期审查和信息更新。本节描述了截止至上述日期对本总结所作的最新修订。
2020年估计新发病例和死亡病例的最新统计数据(引用美国癌症协会的文章作为参考文献2)。发病率和年龄校正死亡率的最新统计数据;修订后的文本声明,约4.4%的美国人一生中将患结直肠癌,而死于结直肠癌的终生风险为1.8%(引用Howlader等人的文章作为参考文献3)。
本总结由独立于NCI的PDQ筛查和预防编委会撰写和维护。本总结基于对文献的独立审查,并不代表NCI或NIH的政策声明。更多有关此总结的政策及PDQ编委会职责的信息可参见本PDQ总结及PDQ®-NCI综合癌症数据库页面。
The PDQ cancer information summaries are reviewed regularly and updated as new information becomes available. This section describes the latest changes made to this summary as of the date above.
Updated statistics with estimated new cases and deaths for 2020 (cited American Cancer Society as reference 2). Updated statistics for incidence and age-adjusted mortality rates; also revised text to state that about 4.4% of Americans are expected to develop the disease within their lifetime, and the lifetime risk of dying from colorectal cancer is 1.8% (cited Howlader et al. as reference 3).
This summary is written and maintained by the PDQ Screening and Prevention Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of NCI. The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or NIH. More information about summary policies and the role of the PDQ Editorial Boards in maintaining the PDQ summaries can be found on the About This PDQ Summary and PDQ® - NCI's Comprehensive Cancer Database pages.
This PDQ cancer information summary for health professionals provides comprehensive, peer-reviewed, evidence-based information about colorectal cancer screening. It is intended as a resource to inform and assist clinicians who care for cancer patients. It does not provide formal guidelines or recommendations for making health care decisions.
This summary is reviewed regularly and updated as necessary by the PDQ Screening and Prevention Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Board members review recently published articles each month to determine whether an article should:
Changes to the summaries are made through a consensus process in which Board members evaluate the strength of the evidence in the published articles and determine how the article should be included in the summary.
Any comments or questions about the summary content should be submitted to Cancer.gov through the NCI website's Email Us. Do not contact the individual Board Members with questions or comments about the summaries. Board members will not respond to individual inquiries.
Some of the reference citations in this summary are accompanied by a level-of-evidence designation. These designations are intended to help readers assess the strength of the evidence supporting the use of specific interventions or approaches. The PDQ Screening and Prevention Editorial Board uses a formal evidence ranking system in developing its level-of-evidence designations.
PDQ is a registered trademark. Although the content of PDQ documents can be used freely as text, it cannot be identified as an NCI PDQ cancer information summary unless it is presented in its entirety and is regularly updated. However, an author would be permitted to write a sentence such as “NCI’s PDQ cancer information summary about breast cancer prevention states the risks succinctly: [include excerpt from the summary].”
The preferred citation for this PDQ summary is:
PDQ® Screening and Prevention Editorial Board. PDQ Colorectal Cancer Screening. Bethesda, MD: National Cancer Institute. Updated
Images in this summary are used with permission of the author(s), artist, and/or publisher for use within the PDQ summaries only. Permission to use images outside the context of PDQ information must be obtained from the owner(s) and cannot be granted by the National Cancer Institute. Information about using the illustrations in this summary, along with many other cancer-related images, is available in Visuals Online, a collection of over 2,000 scientific images.
The information in these summaries should not be used as a basis for insurance reimbursement determinations. More information on insurance coverage is available on Cancer.gov on the Managing Cancer Care page.
More information about contacting us or receiving help with the Cancer.gov website can be found on our Contact Us for Help page. Questions can also be submitted to Cancer.gov through the website’s Email Us.
This PDQ cancer information summary for health professionals provides comprehensive, peer-reviewed, evidence-based information about colorectal cancer screening. It is intended as a resource to inform and assist clinicians who care for cancer patients. It does not provide formal guidelines or recommendations for making health care decisions.
This summary is reviewed regularly and updated as necessary by the PDQ Screening and Prevention Editorial Board, which is editorially independent of the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The summary reflects an independent review of the literature and does not represent a policy statement of NCI or the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Board members review recently published articles each month to determine whether an article should:
Changes to the summaries are made through a consensus process in which Board members evaluate the strength of the evidence in the published articles and determine how the article should be included in the summary.
Any comments or questions about the summary content should be submitted to Cancer.gov through the NCI website's Email Us. Do not contact the individual Board Members with questions or comments about the summaries. Board members will not respond to individual inquiries.
Some of the reference citations in this summary are accompanied by a level-of-evidence designation. These designations are intended to help readers assess the strength of the evidence supporting the use of specific interventions or approaches. The PDQ Screening and Prevention Editorial Board uses a formal evidence ranking system in developing its level-of-evidence designations.
PDQ is a registered trademark. Although the content of PDQ documents can be used freely as text, it cannot be identified as an NCI PDQ cancer information summary unless it is presented in its entirety and is regularly updated. However, an author would be permitted to write a sentence such as “NCI’s PDQ cancer information summary about breast cancer prevention states the risks succinctly: [include excerpt from the summary].”
The preferred citation for this PDQ summary is:
PDQ® Screening and Prevention Editorial Board. PDQ Colorectal Cancer Screening. Bethesda, MD: National Cancer Institute. Updated
Images in this summary are used with permission of the author(s), artist, and/or publisher for use within the PDQ summaries only. Permission to use images outside the context of PDQ information must be obtained from the owner(s) and cannot be granted by the National Cancer Institute. Information about using the illustrations in this summary, along with many other cancer-related images, is available in Visuals Online, a collection of over 2,000 scientific images.
The information in these summaries should not be used as a basis for insurance reimbursement determinations. More information on insurance coverage is available on Cancer.gov on the Managing Cancer Care page.
More information about contacting us or receiving help with the Cancer.gov website can be found on our Contact Us for Help page. Questions can also be submitted to Cancer.gov through the website’s Email Us.