4.1 Article

The impact of cumulative colorectal cancer screening delays: A simulation study

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL SCREENING
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages 92-98

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09691413211045103

Keywords

Screening adherence; fecal immunochemical testing; screening benefit

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute as part of the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET) [U01CA199335, U01CA253913]

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Systematic delays in the screening process can significantly reduce the effectiveness of colorectal cancer screening, especially with longer delays. Screening delays may result in variations in colorectal cancer incidence among different patient groups.
Objective Annual fecal immunochemical tests can reduce colorectal cancer incidence and mortality. However, screening is a multi-step process and most patients do not perfectly adhere to guideline-recommended screening schedules. Our objective was to compare the reduction in colorectal cancer incidence and life-years gained based on US guideline-concordant fecal immunochemical test screening to scenarios with a range of delays. Method The Colorectal Cancer Simulated Population model for Incidence and Natural history (CRC-SPIN) microsimulation model was used to estimate the effect of systematic departures from fecal immunochemical test screening guidelines on lifetime screening benefit. Results The combined effect of consistent modest delays in screening initiation (1 year), repeated fecal immunochemical test screening (3 months), and receipt of follow-up or surveillance colonoscopy (3 months) resulted in up to 1.3 additional colorectal cancer cases per 10,000, 0.4 additional late-stage colorectal cancer cases per 10,000 and 154.7 fewer life-years gained per 10,000. A 5-year delay in screening initiation had a larger impact on screening effectiveness than consistent small delays in repeated fecal immunochemical test screening or receipt of follow-up colonoscopy after an abnormal fecal immunochemical test. The combined effect of consistent large delays in screening initiation (5 years), repeated fecal immunochemical test screening (6 months), and receipt of follow-up or surveillance colonoscopy (6 months) resulted in up to 3.7 additional colorectal cancer cases per 10,000, 1.5 additional late-stage colorectal cancer cases per 10,000 and 612.3 fewer life-years gained per 10,000. Conclusions Systematic delays across the screening process can result in meaningful reductions in colorectal cancer screening effectiveness, especially for longer delays. Screening delays could drive differences in colorectal cancer incidence across patient groups with differential access to screening.

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