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Demand for Colonoscopy in Colorectal Cancer Screening Using a Quantitative Fecal Immunochemical Test and Age/Sex-Specific Thresholds for Test Positivity

Despite age and sex differences in fecal hemoglobin (f-Hb) concentrations, most fecal immunochemical test (FIT) screening programs use population-average cut-points for test positivity. The impact of age/sex-specific threshold on FIT accuracy and colonoscopy demand for colorectal cancer screening ar...

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Published in:Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention biomarkers & prevention, 2018-06, Vol.27 (6), p.704-709
Main Authors: Chen, Sam Li-Sheng, Hsu, Chen-Yang, Yen, Amy Ming-Fang, Young, Graeme P, Chiu, Sherry Yueh-Hsia, Fann, Jean Ching-Yuan, Lee, Yi-Chia, Chiu, Han-Mo, Chiou, Shu-Ti, Chen, Hsiu-Hsi
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c384t-7437595e99069bd79230563f6151f1e6f9d193678705776a4f2c9fa2ea81a0603
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description Despite age and sex differences in fecal hemoglobin (f-Hb) concentrations, most fecal immunochemical test (FIT) screening programs use population-average cut-points for test positivity. The impact of age/sex-specific threshold on FIT accuracy and colonoscopy demand for colorectal cancer screening are unknown. Using data from 723,113 participants enrolled in a Taiwanese population-based colorectal cancer screening with single FIT between 2004 and 2009, sensitivity and specificity were estimated for various f-Hb thresholds for test positivity. This included estimates based on a "universal" threshold, receiver-operating-characteristic curve-derived threshold, targeted sensitivity, targeted false-positive rate, and a colonoscopy-capacity-adjusted method integrating colonoscopy workload with and without age/sex adjustments. Optimal age/sex-specific thresholds were found to be equal to or lower than the universal 20 μg Hb/g threshold. For older males, a higher threshold (24 μg Hb/g) was identified using a 5% false-positive rate. Importantly, a nonlinear relationship was observed between sensitivity and colonoscopy workload with workload rising disproportionately to sensitivity at 16 μg Hb/g. At this "colonoscopy-capacity-adjusted" threshold, the test positivity (colonoscopy workload) was 4.67% and sensitivity was 79.5%, compared with a lower 4.0% workload and a lower 78.7% sensitivity using 20 μg Hb/g. When constrained on capacity, age/sex-adjusted estimates were generally lower. However, optimizing age/-sex-adjusted thresholds increased colonoscopy demand across models by 17% or greater compared with a universal threshold. Age/sex-specific thresholds improve FIT accuracy with modest increases in colonoscopy demand. Colonoscopy-capacity-adjusted and age/sex-specific f-Hb thresholds may be useful in optimizing individual screening programs based on detection accuracy, population characteristics, and clinical capacity. .
doi_str_mv 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-17-0387
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subjects Accuracy
Age
Bioindicators
Cancer screening
Colon
Colonoscopy
Colorectal cancer
Colorectal carcinoma
Epidemiology
Feces
Hemoglobin
Males
Medical screening
Population characteristics
Sensitivity
Sex differences
Thresholds
Working conditions
Workloads
title Demand for Colonoscopy in Colorectal Cancer Screening Using a Quantitative Fecal Immunochemical Test and Age/Sex-Specific Thresholds for Test Positivity
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