Worthington Joachim, van Wifferen Francine, Sun Zhuolu, de Jonge Lucie, Lew Jie-Bin, Greuter Marjolein J E, van den Puttelaar Rosita, Feletto Eleonora, Lansdorp-Vogelaar Iris, Coupé Veerle M H, Ein Yong Jean Hai, Canfell Karen
The Daffodil Centre, The University of Sydney, A Joint Venture with Cancer Council New South Wales, Australia.
Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
EClinicalMedicine. 2023 Jul 20;62:102081. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102081. eCollection 2023 Aug.
Screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) decreases cancer burden through removal of precancerous lesions and early detection of cancer. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted organised CRC screening programs worldwide, with some programs completely suspending screening and others experiencing significant decreases in participation and diagnostic follow-up. This study estimated the global impact of screening disruptions on CRC outcomes, and potential effects of catch-up screening.
Organised screening programs were identified in 29 countries, and data on participation rates and COVID-related changes to screening in 2020 were extracted where available. Four independent microsimulation models (ASCCA, MISCAN-Colon, OncoSim, and Policy1-Bowel) were used to estimate the long-term impact on CRC cases and deaths, based on decreases to screening participation in 2020. For countries where 2020 participation data were not available, changes to screening were approximated based on excess mortality rates. Catch-up strategies involving additional screening in 2021 were also simulated.
In countries for which direct data were available, organised CRC screening volumes at a country level decreased by an estimated 1.3-40.5% in 2020. Globally, it is estimated that COVID-related screening decreases led to a deficit of 7.4 million fewer faecal screens performed in 2020. In the absence of any organised catch-up screening, this would lead to an estimated 13,000 additional CRC cases and 7,900 deaths globally from 2020 to 2050; 79% of the additional cases and 85% of additional deaths could have been prevented with catch-up screening, respectively.
COVID-19-related disruptions to screening will cause excess CRC cases and deaths, but appropriately implemented catch-up screening could have reduced the burden by over 80%. Careful management of any disruption is key to improving the resilience of colorectal cancer screening programs.
The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by Cancer Council New South Wales, Health Canada, and Dutch National Institute for Public Health and Environment.
结直肠癌(CRC)筛查通过切除癌前病变和早期发现癌症来减轻癌症负担。2019冠状病毒病疫情扰乱了全球有组织的CRC筛查计划,一些计划完全暂停筛查,另一些计划的参与率和诊断随访率大幅下降。本研究估计了筛查中断对CRC结局的全球影响,以及追赶性筛查的潜在效果。
在29个国家确定了有组织的筛查计划,并在可行的情况下提取了2020年参与率和与COVID相关的筛查变化数据。基于2020年筛查参与率的下降,使用四个独立的微观模拟模型(ASCCA、MISCAN-结肠、OncoSim和Policy1-肠道)来估计对CRC病例和死亡的长期影响。对于没有2020年参与数据的国家,根据超额死亡率估算筛查变化情况。还模拟了2021年进行额外筛查的追赶策略。
在可获得直接数据的国家,2020年国家层面有组织的CRC筛查量估计下降了1.3%-40.5%。据估计,在全球范围内,与COVID相关的筛查减少导致2020年粪便筛查减少了740万次。在没有任何有组织的追赶性筛查的情况下,从2020年到2050年,全球估计将新增13000例CRC病例和7900例死亡;通过追赶性筛查,分别可预防79%的新增病例和85%的新增死亡。
与COVID-19相关的筛查中断将导致CRC病例和死亡增加,但适当实施追赶性筛查可减轻80%以上的负担。对任何中断进行谨慎管理是提高结直肠癌筛查计划恢复力的关键。
作者披露了以下对本研究的研究、作者身份和/或发表的资金支持:本研究得到新南威尔士癌症理事会、加拿大卫生部和荷兰国家公共卫生与环境研究所的支持。