Disparities exist in colonoscopy compliance

Disparities exist in colonoscopy compliance
Disparities exist in colonoscopy compliance

The common practice of universally recommending colonoscopy may reduce adherence to screening for colorectal cancer (CRC). Clinicians might increase a patient's compliance with CRC screening recommendations if fecal occult blood testing (FOBT) is recommended as an alternative.


This finding came from a study of 997 persons at average risk for CRC in a racially and ethnically diverse urban setting. The participants were randomly assigned to screening with FOBT, colonoscopy, or their choice of one method or the other. One year after randomization, 58% of the group had completed CRC screening.


Patients assigned to colonoscopy completed screening at a significantly lower rate (38%) than those screened with FOBT (67%; P<0.001) or those who were given a choice between colonoscopy and FOBT (69%; P<0.001). Hispanics and Asians (primarily Chinese) completed screening more often than did blacks. Nonwhite participants adhered more often to FOBT, whereas white participants adhered more often to colonoscopy. 


"[Our] results suggest that patient preferences should be considered when making CRC screening recommendations," the researchers wrote (Inadomi JM et al. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172:575-582).


The results from a seperate study showed that differences in screening may be responsible for more than 40% of the disparity in CRC incidence and nearly 20% of CRC mortality between blacks and whites (Lansdorp-Vogelaar I et al. Cancer Epidemiol BiomarkersPrev. 2012;21:728-736).


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