Bowel cancer screening works

New research led by the University of South Australia (UniSA) shows just how effective bowel cancer screening is in helping to reduce the number of bowel cancer deaths by up to 45 per cent. 

Bowel (or colorectal) cancer kills almost 6000 people in Australia each year and 700,000 worldwide but this number would be much higher without pre-diagnostic colonoscopies, a study has found. 

Data from 12,906 bowel cancer patients indicate that faecal occult blood testing (FOBT) with a follow-up colonoscopy plays a key role in catching the disease early, before symptoms appear. 

Researchers from UniSA found that having one pre-diagnostic colonoscopy was associated with a 17 per cent reduction in cancer deaths; a 27 per cent reduction with two pre-diagnostic colonoscopy procedures and 45 per cent for three or more. 

Of the 12,906 records analysed, 37 per cent of the patients had pre-diagnostic colonoscopies and were more likely to live longer than those who were diagnosed after experiencing cancer symptoms. 

Dr Ming Li, one of the study leaders, says that in South Australia, where the study was undertaken, those patients who had pre-diagnostic colonoscopies showed a “significant increase” in survival. 

The risk of colorectal cancer death reduces step-wise with increasing numbers of colonoscopy examinations before symptoms appear, cutting the mortality rate from 17 per cent to 45 per cent,” she says. 

“Our findings show the value of the National Bowel Screening Program which is now being rolled out to everyone in Australia over the age of 50 on a two-yearly basis. It involves doing a simple, non-invasive faecal occult blood test (FOBT) which, if positive, is followed up with a colonoscopy.” 

Bowel cancer causes the second highest number of cancer deaths in Australia after lung cancer, but 90 per cent can be cured if detected early, according to the Cancer Council

Currently, just 39 per cent of the eligible population in Australia undertake a FOBT if invited, which is predicted to prevent 92,000 cancer cases in the next 20 years. If the participation rate were to increase to 60 per cent, an additional 24,300 bowel cancer deaths would be prevented, the Cancer Council estimates. 

Have you received a Bowel Cancer test kit? Have you taken the test?

9 comments

Yes I get mine done every couple of years as reccommended

Yep, I do the poo test :). So far so good - no probs.

Yep,I do the pop test every 2-years and also have a colonoscopy every 5-years )due to a family history of bowel cancer). For the life of me, I can not understand why so many people don’t do the free poop test. It’s non-invasive, simple & effective. So much better than having a colonoscopy ... or waiting until you have symptoms that require further investigation.

Yes, I do a poo and poke it with a little stick and, so far, the results have been negative. Like yesterday's topic about postrate cancer, I can only ask that everyone takes a few minutes out of their life to have the test which won't stop a cancer forming but may find it soon enough to allow treatment that will enable the cancer to be cut out.

Yes I have done the poo test, it is non invasive and much better to know anything untoward  sooner rather

than too late.  Also had colonoscopy - so far all good.    

Had a knee replacement and a gastro-enterologist visited me and told me I needed an iron transfusion. Accepted that, but then she told me I needed an endoscopy and colonoscopy to find out why my iron levels were so low. TOld her I had had the rpoblem since my teens so not worth worrying about. Visited my GP twice over the next 3 months as she kept tabs on iron levels and I needed 2 more infusions of it. She finally convinced me to possibly see gastro-enterologist just as the government screening box arrived. She agreed that they 'may' be sufficient. It was! Diagnosis of early stage bowel cancer, operation and chemo to folow - now clear for 2 years! It works!! 

 

What a great outcome, well done you.  That government screening box is worth its weight in gold.

It would be good IF the register got themselves together and sorted the system out.

I did both tests that were sent to me then a couple of years later I received a very accusative agressive letter saying I had not done the latest test and then proceded to enumerate all the possibilities associated with going undiagnosed. I sent the letter back to them saying that if they bothered to actually send the test rather than a letter designed to scare people into compliance, they may get a better result. So then they sent me a letter saying they had removed me from the register and I have never heard from them again!

So much for mass screening.

How dare you challenge the Bureaucracy! Trust you don't deal with Centrelnk - otherwise you may lose your pension or even get a robodebt notice if you challenge them!

That said, I don't believe they would have taken you out of the register unless you asked them to, or maybe the person there didn't understand the English language you used!

I didn't get a kit in the mail, wonder who stole it? Had one done anyway, and all ok so far.

Wow KSS, that reaction seems a little over the top, theirs I mean, (dropping you from the register), not yours. :)   I've been removed from the register too, but not for the same reason.  Apparently, now I am just too old for them to bother anymore.

They remove you from the register as a matter of course when you turn 74, which seems a strange age to choose, sort of in the middle of nowhere, not 70 or 80, not even 75, or is that just my love of 'order' kicking in?

Anyway, I received a letter (along with my very last test) telling me I would now be removed from the register and if I had any worries to see my GP.  

9 comments



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