Can J Gastroenterol. 2012 Jul;26(7):419-23.
Patients undergoing colorectal cancer screening underestimate their cancer risk and delay presentation for screening.
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in Canada. Screening guidelines recommend that first-time screeningshould occur at 50 years of age for average-risk individuals and at 40 years of age for those with a family history of CRC.
OBJECTIVE:
To examine whether persons with a positive CRC family history were achieving screening at 40 years of age and whether average-risk persons were achieving screening at 50 years of age.
METHODS:
The present study was a cross-sectional analysis of subjects who entered a colon cancer screening program and were undergoing CRCscreening for the first time.
RESULTS:
A total of 778 individuals were enrolled in the present study: 340 (174 males) with no family history of CRC, and 438 (189 males) with a positive family history of CRC. For the group with a positive family history, the mean (± SD) age for primary screening was 54.4±8.5 years, compared with 58.2±6.4 years for the group with no family history. On average, those with a positive family history initiated screening 3.8 years (95% CI 2.8 to 4.8; P<0.05) earlier than those without. Adenoma polyp detection rate for the positive family history group was 20.8% (n=91) compared with 23.5 % (n=80) for the group with no family history.
CONCLUSIONS:
Individuals with a positive CRC family history are initiating screening approximately four years earlier than those without a family history; nevertheless, both groups are undergoing screening well past current guideline recommendations.
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