| Literature DB >> 23459409 |
Itzhak Avital1, Russell C Langan, Thomas A Summers, Scott R Steele, Scott A Waldman, Vadim Backman, Judy Yee, Aviram Nissan, Patrick Young, Craig Womeldorph, Paul Mancusco, Renee Mueller, Khristian Noto, Warren Grundfest, Anton J Bilchik, Mladjan Protic, Martin Daumer, John Eberhardt, Yan Gao Man, Björn Ldm Brücher, Alexander Stojadinovic.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cause of cancer-related death in the United States (U.S.), with estimates of 143,460 new cases and 51,690 deaths for the year 2012. Numerous organizations have published guidelines for CRC screening; however, these numerical estimates of incidence and disease-specific mortality have remained stable from years prior. Technological, genetic profiling, molecular and surgical advances in our modern era should allow us to improve risk stratification of patients with CRC and identify those who may benefit from preventive measures, early aggressive treatment, alternative treatment strategies, and/or frequent surveillance for the early detection of disease recurrence. To better negotiate future economic constraints and enhance patient outcomes, ultimately, we propose to apply the principals of personalized and precise cancer care to risk-stratify patients for CRC screening (Precision Risk Stratification-Based Screening, PRSBS). We believe that genetic, molecular, ethnic and socioeconomic disparities impact oncological outcomes in general, those related to CRC, in particular. This document highlights evidence-based screening recommendations and risk stratification methods in response to our CRC working group private-public consensus meeting held in March 2012. Our aim was to address how we could improve CRC risk stratification-based screening, and to provide a vision for the future to achieving superior survival rates for patients diagnosed with CRC.Entities:
Keywords: cancer screening; colon; colorectal cancer; consensus; evidence-based medicine; rectal; risk identification
Year: 2013 PMID: 23459409 PMCID: PMC3584831 DOI: 10.7150/jca.5834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Most commonly used screening and risk stratification systems
| USPSTF | ACG | ACS-MSTF | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | 50 (45 for African Americans) | 50 | 1-4 | |
| 75 | n/a | n/a | ||
| 76-85 | n/a | n/a | ||
| >85 | n/a | n/a | ||
| gFOBT or FIT, annually | gFOBT or FIT, annually | FOBT annually or | ||
| sDNA |
USPSTF: United States Preventive Services Task Force; ACG: American College of Gastroenterology; AS-MSTF: American Cancer Society - US Multi-Society Task Force; DOD: Department of Defense; FSIG: Flexible sigmoidoscopy (FS); COL: Colonoscopy; FOBT: Fecal occult blood test; FIT: fecal immunochemical test
sDNA: Stool DNA test; CTC: CT colonography; DCBE: Double-contrast barium enema.
The American Cancer Society - US Multi-Society Task Force on CRC (ACS-MSTF) and the American College of Radiology (ACR) surveillance guidelines according to risk groups defined by colonoscopic findings
| Risk groups based on colonoscopy findings | Surveillance recommendations | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients with only one or two small (<1 cm) tubular adenomas with only low-grade dysplasia (low-risk subjects) | 5-10 years | |
| Patients with 3 to 10 adenomas, or any adenoma >1 cm, or any adenoma with villous features, or high-grade dysplasia (high-risk subjects) | 3 years | |
| High risk subjects with follow-up endoscopy showing normal findings or presence of only one or two small (<1 cm) tubular adenomas with only low-grade dysplasia | 5 years | |
| Patients who have more than 10 adenomas at one examination* | <3 years | |
| Patients with sessile adenomas that are removed piecemeal | 2-6 months | |
| Patients with small rectal hyperplastic polyps | No follow-up indication |
Discounted Life-years Gained, Costs, and Costs per Life-year Gained of Established Screening Strategies for Colorectal Cancer Compared With no Screening. Source: Iris Lansdorp-Vogelaar, Amy B. Knudsen and Hermann Brenner. Cost-effectiveness of Colorectal Cancer Screening. Epidemiol Rev (2011) 33 (1): 88-100.
| Study: First Author, Year (Reference No.) | Annual gFOBT | Biennial gFOBT | Flexible Sigmoidoscopy Every 5 Years | Flexible Sigmoidoscopy Every 5 Years + Annual gFOBT | Colonoscopy Every 10 Years | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LYG | Cost | Cost/ LYG | LYG | Cost | Cost/LYG | LYG | Cost | Cost/LYG | LYG | Cost | Cost/LYG | LYG | Cost | Cost/ LYG | |
| Flanagan, 2003 (34) | 0.025 | 328 | 13,100 | 0.016 | 185 | 11,600 | |||||||||
| Frazier, 2000 (35) | 0.042 | 825 | 19,600 | 0.039 | 751 | 19,500 | 0.059 | 1,523 | 26,000 | 0.048 | 1,514 | 31,700 | |||
| Gyrd-Hansen, 1998 (28) | 0.006 | 36 | 6,400 | 0.004 | 20 | 5,300 | |||||||||
| Hassan, 2007 (44) | 0.036 | −10 | CS | ||||||||||||
| Helm, 2000 (36) | 0.014 | 72 | 4,000 | ||||||||||||
| Khandker, 2000 (37) | 0.100 | 2,519 | 25,600 | 0.090 | 1,904 | 22,500 | 0.110 | 3,553 | 32,400 | 0.110 | 3,487 | 31,500 | |||
| Lejeune, 2004 (38) | 0.029 | 126 | 4,400 | ||||||||||||
| Leshno, 2003 (39) | 0.160 | −158 | CS | 0.182 | −324 | CS | 0.180 | −26 | CS | ||||||
| Macafee, 2008 (45) | 0.009 | 30 | 3,400 | ||||||||||||
| O'Leary, 2004 (40) | 0.021 | 2,883 | 9,800 | ||||||||||||
| Pickhardt, 2007 (19) | 0.046 | 495 | 10,700 | ||||||||||||
| Shimbo, 1994 (32) | 0.013 | 750 | 56,300 | ||||||||||||
| Song, 2004 (20) | 0.056 | 508 | 9,100 | 0.048 | 940 | 19,600 | 0.063 | 1,347 | 21,500 | 0.062 | 1,330 | 21,500 | |||
| Sonnenberg, 2000 (41) | 0.019 | 285 | 15,100 | 0.036 | 2,059 | 56,600 | 0.080 | 1,355 | 17,000 | ||||||
| Steele, 2004 (42) | 0.008 | 94 | 11,700 | 0.012 | 132 | 11,400 | 0.019 | 515 | 26,800 | ||||||
| Stone, 2004 (27) | 0.001 | 23 | 15,500 | ||||||||||||
| Tappenden, 2007 (26) | 0.026 | 147 | 5,700 | ||||||||||||
| Tsoi, 2008 (46) | 0.094 | 651 | 7,000 | 0.110 | 989 | 9,000 | 0.159 | 1,281 | 8,100 | ||||||
| Vijan, 2007 (23) | 0.029 | 202 | 6,800 | 0.031 | 948 | 30,100 | 0.050 | 1,138 | 22,800 | 0.053 | 544 | 10,200 | |||
| Wagner, 1995 (18) | 0.059 | 1,086 | 18,500 | 0.036 | 705 | 19,700 | 0.067 | 1,461 | 21,700 | 0.059 | 1,028 | 17,300 | |||
| Whynes, 1998 (25) | 0.017 | 76 | 4,600 | ||||||||||||
| Wu, 2006 (47) | 0.025 | −27 | CS | 0.014 | 35 | 2,500 | 0.025 | −2 | CS | ||||||
| Zauber (MISCAN), 2009 (22) | 0.066 | −88 | CS | 0.077 | 102 | 1,300 | 0.085 | 133 | 1,600 | 0.087 | 205 | 2,400 | |||
| Zauber (SimCRC), 2009 (22) | 0.060 | −305 | CS | 0.069 | −231 | CS | 0.087 | −315 | CS | 0.094 | −207 | CS | |||
| Zauber (CRC-SPIN), 2009 (22) | 0.064 | −471 | CS | 0.080 | −375 | CS | 0.095 | −413 | CS | 0.106 | −403 | CS | |||
Abbreviations: Cost, net costs (in US dollars) of the screening strategy compared with no screening; CS, cost-saving; gFOBT, guaiac fecal occult blood test with Hemoccult II (Beckman Coulter, Inc., Brea, California); LYG, life-year gained compared with no screening.
a The paper by Zauber et al. (22) contained analyses from 3 independently developed colorectal cancer models: MISCAN, SimCRC, and CRC-SPIN.
(Incremental) Cost-effectiveness of Newly Developed Colorectal Cancer Screening Strategies Compared With no Screening and With Established Tests. Source: Iris Lansdorp-Vogelaar, Amy B. Knudsen and Hermann Brenner. Cost-effectiveness of Colorectal Cancer Screening. Epidemiol Rev (2011) 33 (1): 88-100
| Strategy and Study: First Author, Year (Reference No.) | Study Details | Comparator Strategies | CER | ICER | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Test Used | Sensitivity for Cancer, Specificity | Test Costs | ||||
| Berchi, 2004 (33) | Magstream | Sn: 82 | 12 | gFOBT | 3,900 | |
| Chen, 2007 (43) | OC-SENSOR | Sn: 64.6-84.6 | 3 | No screening | CS | Dominant |
| Parekh, 2008 (49) | Insure FIT | Sn: 76 | 25 | gFOBT, COL, stool DNA test | CS | Dominant |
| Shimbo, 1994 (32) | Reversed passive hemagglutination assay | Sn: 48.1-84.3 | 13 | gFOBT | 25,900 | Dominant |
| Zauber, 2009 (MISCAN) (22) | Mix of tests | Sn: 70 | 24 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, CTC, FSIG + gFOBT | 800 | Dominated by SENSA |
| Zauber, 2009 (SimCRC) (22) | Mix of tests | Sn: 70 | 24 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, CTC, FSIG + gFOBT | CS | Dominated by SENSA |
| Zauber, 2009 (CRC-SPIN) (22) | Mix of tests | Sn: 70 | 24 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, CTC, FSIG + gFOBT | CS | Dominated by SENSA |
| Test Used | Sensitivity for Cancer, Specificity | Test Costs | ||||
| Leshno, 2003 (39) | PreGen-Plus | Sn: 91 | 86 | gFOBT, COL, FSIG + gFOBT | 600 | Dominated by COL and FSIG + gFOBT |
| Parekh, 2008 (49) | PreGen-Plus | Sn: 65 | 879 | gFOBT, COL, FIT | 17,500-23,700 | Dominated by all tests |
| Wu, 2006 (47) | PreGen-Plus | Sn: 52 | 53 | gFOBT, FSIG, COL | 9,300-11,900 | Dominated by all tests |
| Zauber (MISCAN), 2007 (52) | PreGen-Plus | Sn: 70 | 375 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, FIT, FSIG + gFOBT | 12,200-23,900 | Dominated by all tests |
| Zauber (SimCRC), 2007 (52) | PreGen-Plus | Sn: 70 | 375 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, FIT, FSIG + gFOBT | 10,800-31,800 | Dominated by all tests |
| Follow-up Interval | Sensitivity for Cancer, Specificity | Test Costs | ||||
| Hassan, 2007 (44) | 10 years, all findings | Sn: 95 | 97 | FSIG, COL | CS | Dominant vs. FSIG, ICER COL vs. CTC: 14,600 |
| Ladabaum, 2004 (53) | 10 years, all findings | Sn: 95 | 1,037 | COL | 36,300 | Dominated by COL |
| Pickhardt, 2007 (19) | 10 years, findings 6+ mm | Sn: 95 | 555 | FSIG, COL | 5,100 | Dominant vs. FSIG, ICER COL vs. CTC: 74,200 |
| Sonnenberg, 2000 (54) | 10 years, all findings | Sn: 80 | 741 | COL | 17,800 | Dominated by COL |
| Vijan, 2007 (23) | 5 years, all findings | Sn: 91 | 707 | gFOBT, COL, FSIG, FSIG + gFOBT | 10,300-21,800 | 197,200 |
| Zauber, 2009 (MISCAN) (22) | 5 years, findings 6+ mm | Sn: 84-92 | 522 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, FIT, FSIG + gFOBT | 9,500-10,200 | Dominated by COL, FSIG + gFOBT |
| Zauber, 2009 (SimCRC) (22) | 5 years, findings 6+ mm | Sn: 84-92 | 522 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, FIT, FSIG + gFOBT | 3,600-4,200 | Dominated by COL, FSIG + gFOBT |
| Zauber, 2009 (CRC-SPIN) (22) | 5 years, findings 6+ mm | Sn: 84-92 | 522 | gFOBT, SENSA, COL, FSIG, FIT, FSIG + gFOBT | 1,900-2,100 | Dominated by COL, FSIG + gFOBT |
Abbreviations: CER, cost-effectiveness ratio compared with no screening; COL, colonoscopy; CS, cost-saving; CTC, computed tomographic colonography; FIT, fecal immunochemical test; FSIG, flexible sigmoidoscopy; gFOBT, guaiac fecal occult blood test with Hemoccult II (Beckman Coulter, Inc., Brea, California); ICER, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio; SENSA, guaiac fecal occult blood test with Hemoccult SENSA (Beckman Coulter).
a The paper by Zauber et al. (22) contained analyses from 3 independently developed colorectal cancer models: MISCAN, SimCRC, and CRC-SPIN.
b Values are expressed as 2010 US dollars.
c Dominant indicates that the test of interest (i.e., FIT, stool DNA, or CTC) was more effective and less costly than the comparator strategies. Dominated indicates that the test of interest was less effective and more costly than the reported comparator strategies.
d Insure FIT, Enterix Inc., Edison, New Jersey; Magstream, Fujirebio Inc., Tokyo, Japan; OC-SENSOR, Eiken Chemical Co. Ltd., Tokyo, Japan; PreGen-Plus, EXACT Sciences Corporation, Madison, Wisconsin.
Advantages and limitations of current screening methods
| Methods | Efficiency | Insufficiency or drawbacks | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| FOBT or | Easiest, least expensive method for screening | Detects only 30-40% of CRC | 18-24 |
| sDNA | Sensitivity ranging from 52% to 91% | Detects only late stage lesions | 25-29 |
| FSIG | Directly inspects the mucosal surface | Fails to detect polyps in the proximal colon, where 40% of all cancers occur, Fails to detect 10-15% sigmoid colon cancers | 30-40 |
| COL | Directly inspects the mucosal surface | Invasive and time consuming | 41-53 |
| DCBE | Sensitivity for detecting polyps and cancer are about 70% and 85%, respectively | Doesn't permit removal of identified abnormalities | 54-56 |
| CTC | Sensitivity for detecting adenomas ≥5 mm ranging from 65-72% | Delivers a significantly higher amount of radiation exposure (2-4 rad) than routine chest radiograph (0.5 rad) | 57-62 |
Comparison of the estimated costs of USPSTF recommended screening methods
| N0 | Screening method | Frequency | Cost/screening ($) | 10-year cost ($) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | FOBT or FIT | Annually | 5-10 | 50-100 |
| 2 | FSIG | Every 5-years | 70-600 | 140-1,200 |
| 3 | DCBE | Every 5-years | 600-1000 | 1,200-2,000 |
| 4 | COL | Every 10-years | 250-5000 | 250-5,000 |
Issues insufficiently addressed by the current risk stratification systems
| # | Issues and facts |
|---|---|
| 1 | Racial disparity |
| 2 | Predisposition of genetic defects |
| 3 | Tumor biology |
| 4. | High CRC incidence areas (epidemiological clusters) |
| 5 | Military and civilian |
| 5 | Strategies and systems for implantation of screening |
| 6 | Post-polypectomy surveillance |
| 7 | Cost effectiveness |
Barriers and obstacles to compliance with recommended screening
| # | Barriers and obstacles |
|---|---|
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 |