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About
The purpose of this study is to see if screening with flexible sigmoidoscopy (a flexible viewing tube) may reduce large bowel cancer and cancer deaths. The researchers also want to see if the addition of screening for occult blood in stools may contribute further to this aim. Additionally, the researchers also want to see to which extent (and in which direction) the study may influence overall endoscopic activity in the general population in the screening area and in areas where controlled screening is not established.
Full description
Although flexible sigmoidoscopy (FS) as a screening tool has a much higher test sensitivity than fecal occult blood tests (FOBT) for colorectal cancer and high-risk adenomas, randomised trials with long-term follow-up are missing. The primary aim is to evaluate the effect on CRC mortality and morbidity by screen detection of CRC and removal of precursor lesions (polypectomy of adenomatous polyps)
Secondary aims:
Population:
21,000 men and women, aged 50-64 years, living in the city of Oslo or the county of Telemark are drawn by randomisation (approx. 1:5) from the population registry and invited to have a flexible sigmoidoscopy examination. The control group constitutes 79,000 individuals. Those invited for flexible sigmoidoscopy are further randomised (1:1) to bring or not to bring 3 successive stool samples for FOBT on attendance for FS.
Method:
This is a once-only screening concept with bowel cleansing being limited to a 240 ml Sorbitol enema given on attendance. The threshold for work-up colonoscopy is low as a positive screening test is defined as any polyp >9mm, any histologically verified adenoma irrespective of size and a positive FOBT. The screening phase is limited to the period January 1999- January 2002 and the first follow-up results will not be reported until all entries have passed the 5-year mark (i.e. in early 2007).
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100,000 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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