FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 23,
Contact: AHCPR Public Affairs
301/594-1364
Karen Carp ext. 1378
Salina Prasad, ext. 1317

AHCPR RELEASES EVIDENCE REPORT ON COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING

The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) today released the first evidence report under its new Evidence-based Practice Initiative. The report indicates that screening has been shown to be effective in detecting early-stage colorectal cancers and their precursors. Early detection and treatment are the primary means of preventing deaths from colorectal cancer.

Colorectal cancer is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States. It is estimated that in 1996, 133,500 new cases of colorectal cancer were diagnosed, and that colorectal cancer accounted for 54,900 deaths.

"This evidence report will improve the early detection and treatment of colorectal cancer by giving clinicians and others state-of-the-art information on screening and diagnostic tests to help them reduce the mortality from this deadly disease," said AHCPR Administrator Clifton R. Gaus. "Our goal is to make this information, and all the evidence reports released in the future, available in the public domain to the widest audience possible."

AHCPR's Evidence-Based Practice Initiative, established in October 1996, will provide medical societies, health care systems, purchasers, health plans, and others with a scientific foundation for developing and implementing their own clinical practice guidelines, performance measures, and other quality improvement tools. In December 1996, AHCPR issued a Request for Proposals to fund Evidence-based Practice Centers to produce future evidence reports and also published a notice in the Federal Register inviting nominations for report topics.

The Colorectal Cancer Screening Evidence Report is based on a systematic review of 3,500 citations from the scientific literature published between 1966 and 1994. The review found evidence that a reduction in deaths from colorectal cancer can be achieved through detection and treatment of early-stage colorectal cancers and the identification and removal of adenomatous polyps -- the precursors of colorectal cancers. Other findings include:

Colorectal cancer incidence rises with age, beginning around age 40, and is higher in men than in women (60.4 versus 40.9 per 100,000 per year).

Survival from colorectal cancer is closely related to the clinical and pathological stage of the disease at diagnosis. Up to 90 percent of patients with cancer limited to the bowel wall will be alive five years after diagnosis, as compared with 35-60 percent of those with involvement of the lymph nodes, and less than 10 percent of patients with metastatic disease.

Racial differences in colorectal cancer survival have been observed. The 1983-1989 five-year relative survival for colon cancer was 61 percent among white men, 50 percent among white women, 48 percent among African-American men, and 49 percent among African-American women. African-American men and women with colorectal cancer have a 50 percent greater probability of dying of colon cancer than do white men and women.

Well-established risk factors for colorectal cancer include older age, male sex, history of inflammatory bowel disease, certain hereditary conditions, and a family history of colorectal cancer. However, about 75 percent of all colorectal cancer occurs in people with no known risk factors.

Most Americans are not screened for colorectal cancer. More than two-thirds of patients present with advanced disease. Information from the National Health Inte rview Survey (NHIS) indicates that in 1992, only 17.3 percent of people aged 50 and older had undergone fecal occult blood testing the previous year, and 9.4 percent had undergone sigmoidoscopy in the previous three years.

Screening with fecal occult blood testing has been shown to reduce colorectal cancer mortality. Screening with flexible sigmoidoscopy can reduce colorectal cancer mortality risk but clinical trials have not been performed that directly assess mortality reduction.

Double contrast barium enema and colonoscopy are proven methods of identifying polyps and colorectal cancer but have not been studied as screening tests.

Further research is needed to demonstrate the effectiveness of colorectal cancer screening tests and determine proper intervals for such testing.

The information contained in AHCPR's evidence report is the basis for a clinical practice guideline by the American Gastroenterology Association (AGA) on colorectal cancer screening that will be published in the February issue of Gastroenterology. The AGA led a consortium that directed an AHCPR-sponsored clinical practice guideline panel on colorectal cancer screening.Work on the AHCPR-sponsored guideline was discontinued when the agency ended its clinical practice guideline program and began developing evidence reports. The AGA then decided to sponsor its own science-based guideline on colorectal cancer screening.

"AGA's use of this information on colorectal cancer screening to develop its guideline on colorectal cancer screening demonstrates the importance and potential impact of AHCPR's Evidence-based Practice Initiative," noted Dr. Gaus. "AHCPR is filling a need for comprehensively reviewed, rigorously analyzed science sought by public- and private-sector organizations to use in improving the quality of health care services they provide."

An executive summary of the Evidence Report on Colorectal Cancer Screening is available on AHCPR's World Wide site (http://www.ahcpr.gov/), from AHCPR's Publications Clearinghouse at (800) 358-9295, and from AHCPR's InstantFAX, (301) 594-2800. The complete evidence report will be available in the near future.

# # #

MEDIA CONTACT
Register for reporter access to contact details