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The Northern-European Initiative on Colorectal Cancer (NordICC)

University of Oslo (UIO) logo

University of Oslo (UIO)

Status and phase

Active, not recruiting
Phase 3

Conditions

Colorectal Cancer

Treatments

Procedure: Colonoscopy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00883792
NordICC

Details and patient eligibility

About

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major burden in western countries. The disease develops from precursor lesions during a long time-interval. Colonoscopy can detect and remove CRC precursor lesions and may thus be effective for CRC prevention. Many national and international health organisations demand evidence from randomised trials to reduce incidence or mortality of the target disease before advocating population-wide cancer screening. However, while colonoscopy screening for the prevention of colorectal cancer is established in the United States and several European countries, no randomised trials exist to quantify the possible benefit of colonoscopy screening. NordICC is a randomised trial investigating the effect of colonoscopy on CRC incidence and mortality.

NordICC is a multicentre, randomised trial in Nordic countries, the Netherlands and Poland. A minimum of 66 000 individuals, age 55-64 years, are drawn randomly from the population registries in the participating countries. 22 000 are invited for once-only colonoscopy (2:1 randomisation). Expected work-load with 50% compliance will be 11,000 colonoscopies. At the screening examination, all detected lesions are biopsied and removed whenever possible. The remaining 44 000 individuals (control group) are not offered any screening examination (care as usual).The primary study aims are CRC incidence and CRC mortality after 15 years of follow-up, with an interim analysis after 10 years of follow-up. In an intention-to-treat approach, a risk reduction of CRC mortality of 25% in the colonoscopy screening group compared to the control group is expected after 10 years follow-up, estimating 50% compliance in the screening group.

Enrollment

95,000 patients

Sex

All

Ages

55 to 64 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • This study is a population-based randomised controlled trial, with randomisation of individuals age 55-64 years living in the screening areas directly from the Population Registries to either screening group or control group. Eligible persons with the same home address will be randomised to the same group (household randomisation).

Exclusion criteria

  • Individuals with previous colorectal surgery (resections, enterostomies)
  • Individuals in need of long-lasting attention and nursing services (somatic or psychosocial, mental retardation).
  • On-going cytotoxic treatment or radiotherapy for malignant disease
  • Severe chronic (longer than trial duration) cardiac (NYHA III-IV)or lung disease
  • Lifelong anticoagulant therapy with Warfarin
  • A coronary event requiring hospitalization during the last 3 months
  • A cerebrovascular event during the last 3 months
  • Resident abroad
  • Return of unopened letter of invitation and/or reminder (address unknown)
  • Message from neighbour/family/post office on death of screenee (not updated in Population Registry)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

95,000 participants in 2 patient groups

Colonoscopy screening
Experimental group
Description:
One-time colonoscopy is the screening tool used in this trial. All individuals in the screening group will be offered a full colonoscopy. At colonoscopy, all detected CRC precursor lesions will be removed, whenever possible.
Treatment:
Procedure: Colonoscopy
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
The control group will not be offered any screening or intervention within the trial, but follow usual care in the participating countries. Individuals assigned to the control group will not be informed about their status as controls in the trial. This approach facilitates a truly population-based study, which will be used to estimate the effect of the screening intervention in the general population, mimicking national CRC screening programs. All ethics committees at the participating centres have approved the study protocol before recruiting individuals to the trial. In Sweden, the national ethics committee particularly reviewed the non-information of the control group and found it ethically acceptable.

Trial contacts and locations

7

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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