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Faecal immunochemical tests safely enhance rational use of resources during the assessment of suspected symptomatic colorectal cancer in primary care: systematic review and meta-analysis

Journal

GUT
Volume 71, Issue 5, Pages 950-+

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2021-324856

Keywords

clinical decision making; colonoscopy; colorectal cancer; endoscopy; stool markers

Funding

  1. Spain's Carlos III Health Care Institute [PI17/00837]
  2. (European Regional Development Fund/European Social Fund 'A way to make Europe'/'Investing in your future')

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The implementation of FIT as a triage test in primary healthcare can improve referral efficiency without missing cases of CRC. FIT at a threshold of 10 μg/g shows a high sensitivity of 87.2% for CRC, while less than one additional CRC would be missed per 1000 patients investigated at a threshold of 20 μg Hb/g faeces.
Objective Implementation of faecal immunochemical tests (FIT) as a triage test in primary healthcare may improve the efficiency of referrals without missing cases of colorectal cancer (CRC). We aim to summarise the performance characteristics of FITs for CRC in symptomatic patients presenting to primary healthcare. Design We performed a systematic literature review of Medline and EMBASE databases from May 2018 to November 2020. Previous related systematic searches were also adapted to this aim and completed with reference screening. We identified studies performed on adult patients consulting for abdominal symptoms in primary care which reported data such that the FIT diagnostic performance parameters for CRC could be obtained. Bivariate models were used to synthesise available evidence. Meta-regression analysis was performed to evaluate the causes of heterogeneity. Results Twenty-three studies (69 536 participants) were included (CRC prevalence 0.3%-6.2%). Six studies (n=34 691) assessed FIT as rule in test (threshold of >= 150 mu g Hb/g faeces) showing a sensitivity of 64.1% (95% CI 57.8% to 69.9%) and a specificity of 95.0% (95% CI 91.2% to 97.2%). A threshold of 10 mu g/g (15 studies; n=48 872) resulted in a sensitivity of 87.2% (95% CI 81.0% to 91.6%) and a specificity of 84.4% (95% CI 79.4% to 88.3%) for CRC. At a 20 mu g Hb/g faeces threshold (five studies; n=24 187) less than one additional CRC would be missed per 1000 patients investigated compared with 10 mu g Hb/g faeces threshold (CRC prevalence 2%). Conclusion FIT is the test of choice to evaluate patients with new-onset lower gastrointestinal symptoms in primary healthcare.

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