Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts; VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Prev Med. 2017 Aug;53(2):e41-e49. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.01.006. Epub 2017 Feb 22.
Obesity is a major risk factor for colorectal cancer (CRC), particularly among men. The purpose of this study was to characterize the prevalence of guideline-adherent CRC screening among obese adults using nationally representative data, assess trends in screening strategies, and identify obesity-specific screening barriers.
Data from 8,550 respondents aged 50-75 years in the 2010 National Health Interview Survey, representing >70 million adults, were analyzed in 2015 using multivariable logistic regression. Prevalence of guideline-adherent CRC screening, endoscopic versus fecal occult blood test screening, and reasons for non-adherence were compared across BMI categories.
Obese class III men (BMI ≥40), compared with normal-weight men, were significantly less likely to be adherent to screening guidelines (38.7% vs 55.8%, AOR=0.35, 95% CI=0.17, 0.75); less likely to have used an endoscopic test (36.7% vs 53.0%, AOR=0.37, 95% CI=0.18, 0.79); and had a trend toward lower fecal occult blood test use (4.2% vs 8.9%, AOR=0.42, 95% CI=0.14, 1.27). Among women, odds of guideline adherence and use of different screening modalities were similar across all BMI categories. Reasons for non-adherence differed by gender and BMI; lacking a physician screening recommendation differed significantly among men (29.7% obese class III vs 15.4% non-obese, p=0.04), and pain/embarrassment differed significantly among women (11.6% obese class III vs 2.6% non-obese, p=0.002).
Despite elevated risk, severely obese men were significantly under-screened for CRC. Addressing the unique screening barriers of obese adults may promote screening uptake and lessen disparities among the vulnerable populations most affected by obesity.
肥胖是结直肠癌(CRC)的一个主要危险因素,尤其是在男性中。本研究的目的是利用全国代表性数据描述肥胖成年人中符合指南的 CRC 筛查的流行情况,评估筛查策略的趋势,并确定肥胖相关的筛查障碍。
使用多变量逻辑回归分析,于 2015 年对代表 7000 多万成年人的 2010 年全国健康访谈调查中 8550 名 50-75 岁的应答者的数据进行分析。比较了不同 BMI 类别之间符合指南的 CRC 筛查、内镜检查与粪便潜血试验筛查的流行率以及不遵守的原因。
与正常体重男性相比,肥胖 III 级男性(BMI≥40)明显不太可能遵守筛查指南(38.7% vs 55.8%,AOR=0.35,95%CI=0.17,0.75);较少使用内镜检查(36.7% vs 53.0%,AOR=0.37,95%CI=0.18,0.79);粪便潜血试验的使用率也呈下降趋势(4.2% vs 8.9%,AOR=0.42,95%CI=0.14,1.27)。在女性中,所有 BMI 类别之间遵守指南和使用不同筛查方式的可能性相似。不遵守的原因因性别和 BMI 而异;缺乏医生的筛查建议在男性中差异显著(肥胖 III 级 29.7% vs 非肥胖 15.4%,p=0.04),而疼痛/尴尬在女性中差异显著(肥胖 III 级 11.6% vs 非肥胖 2.6%,p=0.002)。
尽管风险增加,但严重肥胖的男性 CRC 筛查明显不足。解决肥胖成年人的独特筛查障碍可能会促进筛查的接受度,并减少受肥胖影响最大的弱势群体之间的差异。