Colorectal Cancer Saves
lives
Of cancers affecting men
and women, colorectal cancer is the second leading cancer killer in the United
States.
But it doesn’t have to
be.
U.S. health care
facilities have the capacity to meet colorectal cancer screening goals – yet
only half of adults are up-to-date on screening.
Visit CDC’s Screen for
Life campaign at www.cdc.gov/screenforlife to learn about colorectal cancer
screening.
US government agencies
and their colorectal cancer prevention partners have set a goal that at least
80% of adults ages 50-75 will be screened for colorectal cancer. A recently published study conducted by
researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that
the U.S. healthcare system has the capacity to make this goal a reality.
To determine if the U.S.
could expand its screening capacity, CDC researchers used mathematical modeling
to estimate the number of colonoscopies or fecal immunochemical tests (FIT)
that would be necessary every year to screen for colorectal cancer for 80
percent of adults in the recommended age group. They found that 5.1 million to
13 million colonoscopies would need to be conducted per year, depending on
which screening test was first used.
The analysis also used
survey data from facilities that perform colonoscopies to determine the number
of colonoscopies that are performed in the U.S. every year – and to calculate
how many more they could do. This survey showed that 15 million colonoscopies
were performed in the U.S. in 2012, and that another 10.5 million colonoscopies
could be performed every year.
“Colorectal cancer is the
second leading cancer killer for men and women in the U.S., but it doesn’t have
to be,” says Djenaba Joseph, MD, MPH, medical director of the colorectal cancer
control program at CDC and lead author of the paper. “Screening saves lives.
The good news is that our modeling shows that the U.S. healthcare system has
the potential to meet our national goal of screening 80 percent of adults ages
50-75. Ask your doctor about screening –
there are several options now.”
Of the cancers affecting
both men and women, colorectal cancer (cancer of the colon or rectum) is the
second leading cancer killer in the U.S. Screening can find precancerous polyps
– abnormal growths in the colon or rectum – so they can be removed before
turning into cancer. Screening also helps find colorectal cancer at an early
stage, when it is easier to treat.
The U.S. Preventive
Services Task Force (USPSTF) recently reinforced its recommendations that
adults ages 50-75 be screened for colorectal cancer. This recommendation continues to receive
USPSTF’s highest rating—an “A” grade, indicating that the evidence is
convincing that screening for colorectal cancer has substantial benefits. But
only a little more than half of the target population is up-to-date with
screening
The new study,
“Colorectal Cancer Screening: Estimated Future Colonoscopy Need and Current
Volume and Capacity,” is published online in the Journal Cancer.
CDC’s Screen for Life
campaign has free resources to promote screening available in English and in
Spanish at http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/colorectal/sfl.
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
AND HUMAN SERVICES