Colonoscopy outcomes of primary screening negative participants highlight the missed diagnosis problem of colorectal cancer screening: an observational study from Yuexiu district in Guangzhou, China
Yu Liu, Yujing Fang, Yahui Xu, Shuang Wang, Yanping Wu, Kunhao Bai, Paul W. Bible, Qingjian Ou, Meixian Ye, Jiali Chen, Meiying Lu, Zhizhong Pan, Zhongjin Yao, Chenghua Gong, Desen Wan, Zhenhai Lu

TL;DR
This study shows that many people who tested negative in a colorectal cancer screening still had cancer, suggesting the current screening methods may miss some cases.
Contribution
The study highlights the limitations of current CRC screening tools in China and suggests the need for improved risk scoring systems.
Findings
Negative screening participants had similar rates of colorectal neoplasms as those with positive results.
HRFQ showed limited predictive ability for various colorectal lesions.
Screening-negative individuals with colonoscopies were younger and more educated.
Abstract
False negatives in colorectal cancer (CRC) screening remained a widespread concern, particularly given the notable incidence of false negative results from fecal immunochemical test (FIT). We aimed to investigate the missed diagnoses resulting from primary screening conducted in China that combined the high risk factor questionnaire (HRFQ) with double FITs. A retrospective cohort study was conducted in Yuexiu district of Guangzhou. Among 69,809 eligible participants who completed the primary screening between 2015 and 2021, we focused on the analysis of 527 subjects who had negative primary screening but underwent colonoscopy. These individuals showed statistically comparable prevalence of overall colorectal neoplasms (CRN), advanced colorectal neoplasms (ACRN), and CRC in comparison with those having positive primary screening results (all P>0.05). When compared with subjects having…
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Taxonomy
TopicsColorectal Cancer Screening and Detection · Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes · Genetic factors in colorectal cancer
