Imperiale Thomas F, Cheng Michael, Thomas Melissa R, Matthias Marianne S
Center for Health Information and Communication, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, , Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service CIN 13 416, Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
BMC Prim Care. 2025 Jul 15;26(1):226. doi: 10.1186/s12875-025-02854-6.
In several Western nations, cancers of the colon and rectum have been steadily increasing in persons younger than age 50. Although the age at which to begin colorectal cancer (CRC) screening in the U.S. was lowered to 45 years in 2018, uptake of screening in persons aged 45-49 has been slow. Based on risk factors for CRC prior to age 50 and population-based CRC prevalence data, we previously defined a new metric for estimating the risk of CRC prior to age 50 called "Colon Age". The objective of this study was to obtain qualitative data on the acceptance, feasibility, and clinical utility of this metric from patients and primary care providers.
With permission from their providers, we recruited a convenience sample of average-risk male patients 35-49 years of age during their primary care appointment. Primary care providers were recruited through email invitation. Following informed consent, two interviewers conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with participants. Interviews were conducted until saturation was reached. Interviewers were not involved in the tool's development. The audio-recorded interviews were transcribed, de-identified, and analyzed using the constant comparison method.
Thirty-one (23 male Veteran patients, 8 primary care providers) interviews were conducted. Patients (mean age 47 years, 100% male) expressed willingness to follow screening recommendations from their provider, although most were unaware of other screening options beyond colonoscopy. Overall, patients expressed acceptance of the Colon Age concept and tool, finding it easy to understand, helpful for staying informed of their health, and a way to empower themselves in their screening decisions. Providers (mean age 53 years; 50% female) also found the tool acceptable, commenting on its usefulness for starting screening conversations with patients and improving screening uptake. Providers questioned the tool's time commitment, consistency with practice guidelines, and the process of tool development.
In this age of precision medicine, the Colon Age tool-despite some limitations-appears to be useful to patients and providers in individualizing risk for CRC and may improve uptake of screening in persons younger than age 50.
在几个西方国家,50岁以下人群的结肠癌和直肠癌发病率一直在稳步上升。尽管美国在2018年将开始进行结直肠癌(CRC)筛查的年龄降至45岁,但45 - 49岁人群的筛查接受率一直很低。基于50岁之前CRC的风险因素以及基于人群的CRC患病率数据,我们之前定义了一种新的指标来估计50岁之前CRC的风险,称为“结肠年龄”。本研究的目的是从患者和初级保健提供者那里获取关于该指标的可接受性、可行性和临床实用性的定性数据。
在获得提供者许可后,我们在初级保健预约期间招募了35 - 49岁的平均风险男性患者的便利样本。通过电子邮件邀请招募初级保健提供者。在获得知情同意后,两名访谈者对参与者进行了半结构化定性访谈。访谈持续进行直至达到饱和。访谈者未参与该工具的开发。对录音访谈进行转录、去识别,并使用持续比较法进行分析。
共进行了31次访谈(23名男性退伍军人患者,8名初级保健提供者)。患者(平均年龄47岁,100%为男性)表示愿意遵循提供者的筛查建议,尽管大多数人除了结肠镜检查之外不知道其他筛查选项。总体而言,患者对结肠年龄概念和工具表示接受,认为它易于理解,有助于了解自身健康状况,并是一种在筛查决策中增强自身能力的方式。提供者(平均年龄53岁;50%为女性)也认为该工具可以接受,指出它有助于与患者展开筛查对话并提高筛查接受率。提供者对该工具所需的时间投入、与实践指南的一致性以及工具开发过程提出了疑问。
在这个精准医学时代,结肠年龄工具尽管存在一些局限性,但似乎对患者和提供者在个性化CRC风险方面有用,并且可能提高50岁以下人群的筛查接受率。