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Screening colonoscopy similarly prevented distal and proximal colorectal cancer: a prospective study among 55–69-year-olds

Malte Braitmaier, Sarina Schwarz, Bianca Kollhorst, Carlo Senore, Vanessa Didelez, Ulrike Haug

2022Journal of Clinical Epidemiology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of screening colonoscopy in reducing incidence of distal vs. proximal colorectal cancer (CRC) in persons aged 55-69 years. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Using observational data from a German claims database (German Pharmacoepidemiological Research Database), we emulated a target trial with two arms: Colonoscopy screening vs. no-screening at baseline. Adjusted cumulative incidence of total, distal, and proximal CRC over 11 years of follow-up was estimated in 55-69-year-olds at an average CRC risk and without colonoscopy, polypectomy, or fecal occult blood test before baseline. RESULTS: Overall, 307,158 persons were included (screening arm: 198,389 and control arm: 117,399). The adjusted 11-year risk of any CRC was 1.62% in the screening group and 2.38% in the no-screening group resulting in a relative risk of 0.68 (95% CI: 0.63-0.73). The relative risk was 0.67 for distal CRC (95% CI: 0.62-0.73) and 0.70 (95% CI: 0.63-0.79) for proximal CRC. The cumulative incidence curves of the groups crossed after 6.7 (distal CRC) and 5.0 years (proximal CRC). CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that colonoscopy is effective in preventing distal and proximal CRC. Unlike previous studies not using a target trial approach, we found no relevant difference in the effectiveness by location.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineColonoscopyIncidence (geometry)Colorectal cancerCumulative incidenceInternal medicineRelative riskObservational studyPolypectomyColorectal cancer screeningRandomized controlled trialConfidence intervalCancerCohortPhysicsOpticsColorectal Cancer Screening and DetectionGenetic factors in colorectal cancerGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening