Screening for colorectal cancer by full colonoscopy in first-degree relatives of colorectal cancer patients: a multicentric study by the Italian League for the Fight against Cancer.

IF 1.5 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Annali di igiene : medicina preventiva e di comunita Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-07 DOI:10.7416/ai.2024.2618
Giacomo Diedenhofen, Augusto Morgia, Nicola Sinnona, Alberto Pacchiarotti, Anna Fiaschetti, Vito Forte, Mauro Tosoni, Fabrizio Liberati, Sandro Boschetto, Enrico Zepponi, Pietro Marogna, Alessandra Manca, Marco Bisail, Annarita Vestri, Alessandro Rossi
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Abstract

Background: Colorectal cancer currently presents the third-highest incidence of cancers worldwide, making secondary prevention through screening programs for colorectal cancer, usually by Fecal Occult Blood Testing, an essential preventive medicine intervention. First-degree relatives of colorectal cancer patients are a particularly at-risk group, with indications to consider direct screening by full colonoscopy. Colonoscopy is considered the gold standard for diagnosing colorectal cancer, as it has high sensitivity and specificity, and is both a diagnostic and therapeutic tool. However, it requires significant organizational and financial resources, and has a small but relatively higher risk of complications as opposed to fecal occult blood testing. The present study aimed to assess the appropriateness of a screening program without age restrictions of CRC by full colonoscopy in asymptomatic, first-degree adult relatives of patients with colorectal cancer, aiming both to actively increase screening coverage and to determine the detection rate of precancerous lesions and colorectal cancer in this population.

Study design: Uncontrolled interventional study - colorectal cancer screening by full colonoscopy for at-risk population.

Methods: The Italian League for the Fight against Cancer started a colorectal cancer screening program by full colonoscopy for first-degree relatives of colorectal cancer patients in 1998 in the province of Latina, Lazio Region, Italy. The program was expanded to the provinces of Rieti, Lazio Region, and Sassari, Sardinia Region, in 2014 and 2016 respectively, and was concluded in 2018. Subjects were actively and voluntarily recruited by the study's working group. Subjects that had already been subjected to a full colonoscopy in the preceding 5 years were excluded from this study. Identified neoplastic lesions were treated either directly or referred to the Day Hospital setting, and histologically diagnosed following World Health Organization guidelines.

Results: In total, 2,288 subjects (age range 15-88, mean 52.3 yrs, M/F = 946/1,204) were screened by colonoscopy, of which 103 (4.5%) were incomplete and 2,173 (95.0%) complete, with data on colonoscopy performance missing for 12 participants. Out of 468 positive outcomes on colonoscopy, diagnosis for 422 (204M/173F), 19.4% of total subjects, was adenomatous polyps and 46 (20M/20F), 2.1% of total subjects, was colorectal cancer. Female sex was a protective factor against a positive test outcome, with a 35% reduction compared to male sex, with OR=0.64 95%CI (0.52-0.80). On the other hand, being over 50 years of age was found to be a risk factor, making a positive outcome more than twice as likely, with OR=2.3 95%CI (1.8-2.9). Subjects over 50 also had significantly more instances of multiple adenomas being found, however the size distribution of found adenomas was not significantly different between subjects under and over 50, despite size being a predictor of risk of neoplastic progression.

Conclusions: Given the high detection rate of precancerous lesions and colorectal cancer in the studied population, it is our opinion that guidelines should continue to recommend earlier and more frequent screening in first-degree relatives of patients with colorectal cancer, and, barring the introduction of more cost-effective and/or lower risk procedures with a similar efficacy profile, maintain the use of colonoscopy as the main screening option.

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通过对大肠癌患者一级亲属进行全结肠镜检查筛查大肠癌:意大利抗癌联盟的一项多中心研究。
背景:大肠癌目前在全球癌症发病率中排名第三,因此,通过大肠癌筛查计划(通常是通过粪便隐血试验)进行二级预防是一项重要的预防医学干预措施。结直肠癌患者的一级亲属是一个特别高危的群体,有迹象表明应考虑通过全结肠镜检查进行直接筛查。结肠镜检查被认为是诊断结肠直肠癌的黄金标准,因为它具有很高的灵敏度和特异性,既是诊断工具,也是治疗工具。然而,结肠镜检查需要大量的组织和财政资源,与粪便潜血检测相比,其并发症风险较小,但相对较高。本研究旨在评估在无症状的结直肠癌患者一级成年亲属中开展无年龄限制的全结肠镜检查计划是否合适,目的是积极提高筛查覆盖率,并确定该人群中癌前病变和结直肠癌的检出率:研究设计:非对照干预研究--通过全结肠镜检查为高危人群进行结直肠癌筛查:意大利抗癌联盟于1998年在意大利拉齐奥大区的拉蒂纳省启动了一项大肠癌筛查计划,对大肠癌患者的一级亲属进行全结肠镜检查。该计划分别于 2014 年和 2016 年扩展到拉齐奥大区的里耶蒂省和撒丁岛大区的萨萨里省,并于 2018 年结束。受试者由研究工作组积极自愿招募。本研究不包括在过去 5 年中接受过全面结肠镜检查的受试者。发现的肿瘤病变直接接受治疗或转诊至日间医院,并根据世界卫生组织的指南进行组织学诊断:共有 2,288 名受试者(年龄在 15-88 岁之间,平均 52.3 岁,男女比例 = 946/1,204)接受了结肠镜筛查,其中 103 人(4.5%)未完成筛查,2,173 人(95.0%)完成了筛查,12 人的结肠镜检查结果数据缺失。在 468 例结肠镜检查阳性结果中,422 例(204 名男性/173 名女性)(占总人数的 19.4%)诊断为腺瘤性息肉,46 例(20 名男性/20 名女性)(占总人数的 2.1%)诊断为结直肠癌。女性性别是检测结果呈阳性的一个保护因素,与男性性别相比减少了 35%,OR=0.64 95%CI(0.52-0.80)。另一方面,50 岁以上是一个风险因素,使检测结果呈阳性的可能性增加了一倍多,OR=2.3 95%CI (1.8-2.9)。50岁以上的受试者发现多发性腺瘤的情况也明显增多,但发现的腺瘤的大小分布在50岁以下和50岁以上的受试者之间没有明显差异,尽管大小是预测肿瘤进展风险的一个因素:鉴于研究人群中癌前病变和结直肠癌的检出率较高,我们认为,指南应继续建议对结直肠癌患者的一级亲属进行更早、更频繁的筛查,并且,如果没有更具成本效益和/或风险更低且疗效相似的检查方法,应继续将结肠镜检查作为主要的筛查方法。
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来源期刊
Annali di igiene : medicina preventiva e di comunita
Annali di igiene : medicina preventiva e di comunita HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
69
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