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Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design

Objectives To report the sensitivities of the faecal occult blood test, screening episode, and screening programme for colorectal cancer and the benefits of applying a randomised design at the implementation phase of a new public health policy. Design Experimental design incorporated in public healt...

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Autores principales: Malila, Nea, Oivanen, Tiina, Malminiemi, Outi, Hakama, Matti
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2593450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19022840
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2261
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author Malila, Nea
Oivanen, Tiina
Malminiemi, Outi
Hakama, Matti
author_facet Malila, Nea
Oivanen, Tiina
Malminiemi, Outi
Hakama, Matti
author_sort Malila, Nea
collection PubMed
description Objectives To report the sensitivities of the faecal occult blood test, screening episode, and screening programme for colorectal cancer and the benefits of applying a randomised design at the implementation phase of a new public health policy. Design Experimental design incorporated in public health evaluation using randomisation at individual level in the target population. Setting 161 of the 431 Finnish municipalities in 2004-6. Participants 106 000 adults randomised to screening or control arms. In total, 52 998 adults aged 60-64 in the screening arm received faecal occult blood test kits. Main outcome measures Test, episode, and programme sensitivities estimated by the incidence method and corrected for selective attendance and overdiagnosis. Results The response for screening was high overall (70.8%), and significantly better in women (78.1%) than in men (63.3%). The incidence of cancer in the controls was somewhat higher in men than in women (103 v 93 per 100 000 person years), which was not true for interval cancers (42 v 49 per 100 000 person years). The sensitivity of the faecal occult blood test was 54.6%. Only a few interval cancers were detected among those with positive test results, hence the episode sensitivity of 51.3% was close to the test sensitivity. At the population level the sensitivity of the programme was 37.5%. Conclusions Although relatively low, the sensitivity of screening for colorectal cancer with the faecal occult blood test in Finland was adequate. An experimental design is a prerequisite for evaluation of such a screening programme because the effectiveness of preventing deaths is likely to be small and results may otherwise remain inconclusive. Thus, screening for colorectal cancer using any primary test modality should be launched in a public health programme with randomisation of the target population at the implementation phase.
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spelling pubmed-25934502008-12-04 Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design Malila, Nea Oivanen, Tiina Malminiemi, Outi Hakama, Matti BMJ Research Objectives To report the sensitivities of the faecal occult blood test, screening episode, and screening programme for colorectal cancer and the benefits of applying a randomised design at the implementation phase of a new public health policy. Design Experimental design incorporated in public health evaluation using randomisation at individual level in the target population. Setting 161 of the 431 Finnish municipalities in 2004-6. Participants 106 000 adults randomised to screening or control arms. In total, 52 998 adults aged 60-64 in the screening arm received faecal occult blood test kits. Main outcome measures Test, episode, and programme sensitivities estimated by the incidence method and corrected for selective attendance and overdiagnosis. Results The response for screening was high overall (70.8%), and significantly better in women (78.1%) than in men (63.3%). The incidence of cancer in the controls was somewhat higher in men than in women (103 v 93 per 100 000 person years), which was not true for interval cancers (42 v 49 per 100 000 person years). The sensitivity of the faecal occult blood test was 54.6%. Only a few interval cancers were detected among those with positive test results, hence the episode sensitivity of 51.3% was close to the test sensitivity. At the population level the sensitivity of the programme was 37.5%. Conclusions Although relatively low, the sensitivity of screening for colorectal cancer with the faecal occult blood test in Finland was adequate. An experimental design is a prerequisite for evaluation of such a screening programme because the effectiveness of preventing deaths is likely to be small and results may otherwise remain inconclusive. Thus, screening for colorectal cancer using any primary test modality should be launched in a public health programme with randomisation of the target population at the implementation phase. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2008-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2593450/ /pubmed/19022840 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2261 Text en © Malila et al 2008 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Malila, Nea
Oivanen, Tiina
Malminiemi, Outi
Hakama, Matti
Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title_full Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title_fullStr Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title_full_unstemmed Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title_short Test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in Finland: experimental design
title_sort test, episode, and programme sensitivities of screening for colorectal cancer as a public health policy in finland: experimental design
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2593450/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19022840
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2261
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