| Literature DB >> 28097082 |
Tyler Janz1, Karen Lu1, Michael R Povlow1, Brittany Urso1.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Recently, more focus has been placed on developing effective screening tools to detect the presence of both precancerous and cancerous lesions present in the colon and rectum. Colonoscopy has been well established as the gold standard of the colon and rectal cancer screening. However, not all patients are willing to undergo a colonoscopy due to the procedure's invasive nature. Non-invasive screening methods have been developed to appeal to patients who refuse colonoscopy. Fecal occult blood tests have long been used by physicians, in addition to colonoscopy, in an effort to screen for CRC. New screening methods, such as fecal immunochemical test (FIT) and stool DNA (sDNA) testing, have been developed as a more sensitive screening measure to attempt to accurately screen patients who have precancerous or cancerous colorectal lesions. This article compares CRC screening techniques through literature review in order to determine which tests offer the most sensitive detection of CRC and precancerous lesions in average-risk adults over the age of 50 years old. Through this review, it can be seen that sDNA is more sensitive than FIT in detecting all stages of CRC, as well as precancerous lesions.Entities:
Keywords: colonoscopy; colorectal cancer; colorectal screening; crc; fecal immunochemisty testing; fit; multitarget dna testing; sdna; stool dna testing
Year: 2016 PMID: 28097082 PMCID: PMC5235652 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Colorectal Cancer Testing Methods
Definitions of gFOBT, FIT, and sDNA tests as defined according to basis and method of each test.
gFOBT: guaiac-based fecal occult blood test; FIT: fecal immunochemical test; sDNA: stool DNA testing
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Detects the presence or absence of heme in stool. |
Detects microscopic blood present in stool via antibodies to globin. |
Includes the same properties of FIT testing. Also includes 11 different DNA sequences commonly seen in colon polyps/cancers. |
sDNA and gFOBT Sensitivity in the Detection of Colorectal High-Grade Dysplastic Adenomas and Invasive Cancers
Detection rates and sensitivities of sDNA and gFOBT tests of colorectal high-grade dysplastic adenomas and invasive cancers according to a 2004 study completed by Imperiale, et al. [4] based upon 4,404 average-risk, asymptomatic individuals over the age of 50.
gFOBT: guaiac-based fecal occult blood test; sDNA: stool DNA testing
| Testing Method: Detection Rate and Sensitivity | ||
| sDNA | gFOBT (Hemoccult II) | |
| High-grade dysplastic adenomas and invasive cancers (n = 71) | 29 (40.8) | 10 (14.1) |
| Invasive cancers (n = 31) | 16 (51) | 4 (12.9) |
sDNA Sensitivity in the Detection of CRC and Adenomas
Examination of sDNA sensitivity in the detection of CRC and adenomas among the training and test sets in a study performed by Aliquist, et al. of 678 patients that had CRC or at least one colorectal adenoma > 1 cm. The training set had a modeled specificity of 90%. The test set had a modeled specificity of 90%; however, it was observed at 85%.
sDNA: stool DNA testing; CRC: colorectal cancer
| sDNA Sensitivity | ||
| Training set | Test set | |
| Colorectal cancer | 89% | 78% |
| Adenoma > 1 cm | 62% | 64% |
| Adenoma ≥ 1 cm | 56% | 48% |
sDNA and FIT Sensitivity in the Detection of CRC and Advanced Precancerous Lesions
Comparison of FIT and sDNA testing in the detection of CRC and advanced pre-cancerous lesions in a 2014 study performed by Imperiale, et al., which compared 9,989 average risk individuals between the ages of 50- 84.
sDNA: stool DNA testing; FIT: fecal immunochemical test; CRC: colorectal cancer
| Testing Method: Detection and Sensitivity | ||
| FIT | sDNA | |
| Colorectal cancer (n = 65) | 48 (73.8) | 60 (92.3) |
| Advanced precancerous lesions (n = 757) | 29 (3.8) | 170 (22.5) |
sDNA, FIT-50, FIT-100 Sensitivities in the Detection of Sessile Serrated Polyps Greater Than 1 cm
Comparison of sensitivities of the FIT-100, FIT-50, and sDNA tests in the detection of sessile serrated polyps > 1 cm. This study performed in 2014 by Heigh, et al. [6] obtained single stool samples from 456 asymptomatic individuals prior to colonoscopy for examination.
sDNA: stool DNA testing; FIT: fecal immunochemical test
| Testing Method Sensitivitya | ||
| FIT-100 | sDNA | |
| Sessile serrated polyps > 1 cm | 0% | 63% |
| Testing method sensitivityb | ||
| FIT-50 | sDNA | |
| Sessile serrated polyps > 1 cm | 10% | 66% |
| aSpecificity cutoff was set to 95%. bSpecificity cutoff was set to 91% | ||