A colonoscopy every 10 years could prevent 40 percent of colorectal cancers, according a massive US study that came out last week, supporting the effectiveness of the commonly-used test.
Those with family history of these types of cancer — the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in the US — should have more frequent screenings, the study in the New England Journal of Medicine said.
The results confirm the current recommendations for colonoscopies, offering evidence it is particularly useful in preventing cancers that originate in the proximal, or upper, part of the colon.
“Our study provides strong evidence that colonoscopy is an effective technique for preventing cancers of both distal and proximal regions of the colorectum,” said Shuji Ogino, a lead author from the Harvard School of Public Health.
The screening is crucial in preventing proximal cancers, he explained, because another test, called sigmoidoscopy, uses a scope to examine only the lower part of the colon and “alone is insufficient for preventing proximal cancer.”
Unlike sigmoidoscopy, a colonoscopy examines the entire colon, using a camera-equipped device that also has tools to remove cysts and benign tumors.
The authors analyzed data from nearly 89,000 participants in two long-term studies, basing their conclusions on surveys completed every two years between 1988 and 2008.
The researchers also obtained information on any colonoscopies and sigmoidoscopies conducted. They documented 1,815 cases of colorectal cancer and 474 resulting deaths.
They found that both screenings reduced the risk of developing, or dying from, colorectal cancers. But only the more complete, colonoscopy screening reduced the risk of cancers in the upper part of the colon -- though even still, its effects were less successful than for preventing lower bowel cancers.
They estimated that, if all the participants had undergone a colonoscopy, the overall risk of colorectal cancers would have been reduced by 40 percent — preventing 61 percent of lower colon cancers and just 22 percent of upper colon cancers.
The researchers speculated there may be molecular or biological differences between upper and lower colon cancers behind the lower success rate.
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