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BACKGROUND:
The National Health Service Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (BCSP) in England uses a guaiac-based faecal occult blood test (gFOBt). A quantitative faecal immunochemical test (FIT) for haemoglobin (Hb) has many advantages, including being specific for human blood, detecting Hb at a much lower concentration with a single faecal sample and improved uptake.
METHODS:
In 2014, a large comparative pilot study was performed within BCSP to establish the acceptability and diagnostic performance of FIT. Over a 6-month period, 40 930 (1 in 28) subjects were sent a FIT (OC-SENSOR) instead of a gFOBt. A bespoke FIT package was used to mail FIT sampling devices to and from FIT subjects. All participants positive with either gFOBt or FIT (cut-off 20 µg Hb/g faeces) were referred for follow-up. Subgroup analysis included cut-off concentrations, age, sex, screening history and deprivation quintile.
RESULTS:
While overall uptake increased by over 7 percentage points with FIT (66.4% vs 59.3%, OR 1.35, 95% CI 1.33 to 1.38), uptake by previous non-responders almost doubled (FIT 23.9% vs gFOBt 12.5%, OR 2.20, 95% CI 2.10 to 2.29). The increase in overall uptake was significantly higher in men than women and was observed across all deprivation quintiles. With the conventional 20 µg/g cut-off, FIT positivity was 7.8% and ranged from 5.7% in 59-64-year-old women to 11.1% in 70-75-year-old men. Cancer detection increased twofold and that for advanced adenomas nearly fivefold. Detection rates remained higher with FIT for advanced adenomas, even at 180 µg Hb/g.
CONCLUSIONS:
Markedly improved participation rates were achieved in a mature gFOBt-based national screening programme and disparities between men and women were reduced. High positivity rates, particularly in men and previous non-respondents, challenge the available colonoscopy resource, but improvements in neoplasia detection are still achievable within this limited resource.
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Pendant 6 mois, 1 individu sur 28 (40.000) s’est vu proposer le FIT (OC-SENSOR ; cut-off : 20µg/g) en lieu et place du gFOBT. Le taux de participation est majoré de 7% (66,4 vs 59,3%), particulièrement chez les individus antérieurement « non répondeurs » (23,9 vs 12,5%) et surtout chez les hommes. Le taux de positivité est de 7,8% (extrêmes : 5,7% avant 65 ans et 11% après 70 ans). Le taux de détection de cancer double et celui d’adénomes avancés est multiplié par 5.
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Cette étude « grandeur nature » sur une base populationnelle confirme les données antérieures notamment néerlandaises sur la supériorité du test immunologique, tant pour la participation que pour la détection lésionnelle. Le taux de positivité est deux fois superieur à celui attendu (et déjà observé en France), probablement en rapport avec un seuil de positivité plus bas.
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