Colorectal Cancer Screening Among People With Intellectual Disabilities
Trine Allerslev Horsbøl, Susan Ishøy Michelsen, Trine Toft Sørensen, Knud Juel, Morten Rasmussen, Ismail Gögenur, Susanne Oksbjerg Dalton, Amina Banda, Maarten Cuypers, Lau Caspar Thygesen

TL;DR
People with intellectual disabilities in Denmark are less likely to participate in and complete colorectal cancer screening compared to those without disabilities, highlighting the need for tailored strategies to address these disparities.
Contribution
This study provides empirical evidence of inequities in colorectal cancer screening participation and completion among people with intellectual disabilities.
Findings
People with intellectual disabilities had significantly lower screening participation and completion rates compared to those without disabilities.
Stool sample return increased with disability severity, but diagnostic examination rates after a positive test decreased with severity.
Colonoscopies were more often incomplete for people with intellectual disabilities compared to those without.
Abstract
Do people with intellectual disabilities participate in and complete colorectal cancer screening to the same extent as those without such disabilities? In this register-based cohort study of 17 117 people with intellectual disabilities, screening participation and completion were significantly lower compared with a reference cohort. The proportion returning a stool sample increased with intellectual disability severity, whereas the proportion undergoing diagnostic examination after a positive screening test result decreased. These findings indicate substantial inequities, highlighting the need for tailored strategies to ensure equitable colorectal cancer screening access for people with intellectual disability. This cohort study examines participation in and completion of colorectal cancer screening among people with intellectual disabilities in Denmark. Colorectal cancer mortality…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDown syndrome and intellectual disability research · Genetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · Genetic factors in colorectal cancer
