Screening for colorectal cancer may benefit male patients

ANI  |  Washington D.C. [USA] 

According to a recent study, for colorectal can benefit male patients, while similar benefits were not found among women.

Between 2004 and 2016, an extensive programme was conducted in Finland, intending to study the potential benefits and downsides of a nation-wide for

The study targeted people aged 60-69 years, and just under half of the age group, or a little more than 300,000 people, were randomised by late 2011. Half of the population in the study was invited for screening, while the other half of the age cohort served as a control group. Faecal occult blood tests (FOBT) were used in the screening, and patients who tested positive for blood were referred for a colonoscopy.

The first study based on the screening results indicated no significant decrease in mortality, so the screenings were discontinued after 2016. However, researchers from the and the Finnish Cancer Registry wanted to examine whether the screening had offered benefits to patients with

"Practically no cancer screenings have been found to have an impact on overall mortality. However, they may still be useful in other ways. We wanted to study whether the patients could avoid the more intense treatments if they participated in screening for colorectal cancer," said Dr.

The study examined the data of approximately 1,400 patients diagnosed with The results indicated that among patients from the screening group, the surgical removal of an entire was more commonly successful than it was among the control group patients, and they were less likely to require The patients from the screening group were also less likely to undergo emergency because of their than the control group patients.

"The control group had 50 percent more emergency surgeries, 40 percent more incomplete removals and 20 percent more treatments than patients in the screening group," said Adjunct Professor Ville Sallinen,

Closer inspection of the results showed that these benefits were particularly prevalent among male patients. Similar benefits were not seen among women.

Additionally, the researchers found that the screening was most efficient at detecting and the screening was found to have no benefit for patients with cancer on the right side, possibly because blood seeping from on the right side becomes so diluted as it travels through the colon that the gFOBT can no longer detect it.

"In the future, we must examine whether different screening techniques could improve the situation of female patients and facilitate the diagnosis of right-sided colorectal cancer," the researchers stated.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, November 26 2018. 14:10 IST