U.S. Cancer deaths down but far too few
Americans screened for Colon Cancer...Screening
rates worst among Racial Minorities, the Uninsured and
Medicare patients
BETHESDA, Md., Feb. 20 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- New data
revealing decreasing trends in cancer deaths
in the United States overall, and in
colorectal cancer deaths in particular,
highlight the remarkable benefits of
colorectal cancer screening tests, but the
lifesaving potential of these tests is
unrealized for many Americans, according to
experts from the American College of
Gastroenterology.
Racial minorities,
uninsured Americans and even Medicare
patients who should be tested are not being
screening appropriately, and other recent
studies reveal that they are diagnosed with
more advanced cancers compared to patients
with private insurance.
Today, the American Cancer Society reported a downward trend in
cancer deaths between 2004 and 2005.
Deaths
from cancer of the colon and rectum
decreased from 1998 to 2004 among both men
and women, according to ACS. The report
attributes early detection to this sharp
decline in colon cancer deaths.
Early
detection of colorectal cancer, when it is
most treatable, directly results in improved
survival, exceeding 90 percent when detected
at the earliest stage.
According to ACG President Amy E. Foxx-Orenstein, D.O., FACG, "The
good news is that colorectal cancer deaths
are down, but marked differences in the
experience of colorectal cancer, its impact
on quality of life, and death rates are seen
between whites and blacks, and between the
uninsured, and even those with health
coverage under Medicare and Medicaid."
According to Dr. Foxx-Orenstein, "The
American College of Gastroenterology is
committed to national policy changes to
improve access to colorectal screening and
increased use of these proven prevention
strategies, including reversing Medicare's
massive cuts to reimbursement for these
tests since the benefit was first
introduced, as well as to payments in
ambulatory surgery centers where many
screening tests are performed."
Recent Studies Reveal Underuse of Colorectal Screenings, Late Stage
Cancer Diagnoses
An analysis published in ACS' journal CANCER in January 2008 of
over 150,000 Medicare beneficiaries revealed
that only 25 percent received recommended
screenings for colorectal cancer since
Medicare started to cover preventive
screening tests.
This finding reflects a
significant underuse of proven screening
tests among Medicare patients, and echoes
other recent findings that Medicaid patients
and the uninsured generally are being
diagnosed with colorectal cancer at later
stages, when the prognosis is far worse.
A study by Halpern et al. published in The Lancet Oncology on
February 18, 2008 found a correlation
between insurance status and stage of cancer
diagnosis.
According to the Halpern
analysis, uninsured patients were two to
three times more likely to be diagnosed at
late stages (Stage III or State IV) than at
Stage I.
The disparity was most pronounced
among cancers that could be detected early
through screening or symptom assessment
including colorectal cancer.
The analysis
also looked at racial background and found
late state diagnosis for ten of twelve
cancers among African Americans compared to
whites.
ACG Recommends Earlier Screening for African-Americans: Begin at
Age 45
African-Americans are diagnosed with colorectal cancer at a younger
age than other ethnic groups, and
African-Americans with colorectal cancer
have decreased survival compared with other
ethnic groups.
Physician experts from the
American College of Gastroenterology in 2005
issued new recommendations to healthcare
providers to begin colorectal cancer
screening in African-Americans at age 45
rather than 50.
Colonoscopy is the preferred
method of screening for colorectal cancer
and data support the recommendation that
African-Americans begin screening at a
younger age because of the high incidence of
colorectal cancer and a greater prevalence
of proximal or right-sided polyps and
cancerous lesions in this population.
The
recommendations were published in the March
2005 issue of The American Journal of
Gastroenterology.
Colorectal Cancer Screening -- Recommendations from the American
College of Gastroenterology
For normal risk individuals, the American College of
Gastroenterology recommends screening
beginning at age 50 (age 45 for
African-Americans).
The preferred screening
test according to the American College of
Gastroenterology is colonoscopy every 10
years. An alternative strategy for average
risk individuals is an annual stool test for
blood, and a flexible sigmoidoscopic exam
every 5 years.
Unlike colonoscopy, this
approach does not allow identification and
removal of polyps in the entire colon.
For those with a family history of colorectal cancer, testing
should begin at 40 years of age or 10 years
younger than the age of the youngest
affected relative at the time of colon
cancer diagnosis, whichever is earlier.
For
both average and high risk individuals, all
potential precancerous polyps should be
removed.
About Colorectal Cancer
Colorectal cancer is the number two cancer killer in the United
States, affecting men and women equally.
However, with screening and early detection,
many of these deaths can be prevented. Most
colorectal cancers develop from polyps,
which are abnormal growths in the colon.
Left undetected and free to grow, some
polyps may develop into cancer. Screening
tests can find and remove pre-cancerous
polyps before they turn into cancer.
About the American College of Gastroenterology
Founded in 1932, the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) is
an organization with an international
membership of more than 10,000 individuals
from 80 countries.
The College is committed
to serving the clinically oriented digestive
disease specialist through its emphasis on
scholarly practice, teaching and research.
The mission of the College is to serve the
evolving needs of physicians in the delivery
of high quality, scientifically sound,
humanistic, ethical, and cost-effective
health care to gastroenterology patients.
Source: American College of Gastroenterology