Despite Australia and New Zealand having one of the in the world, most Australians are either not having the right type of bowel cancer screening or not having any screening at all.
Around if it is identified early, so increased screening is vital to reduce both the number of people with colorectal cancer and stress on the health system.
Yet over are not being screened and almost 20 per cent of people at average risk are having unnecessary colonoscopies.
Every year, the ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Bowel Cancer Screening Program (NBCSP) sends people aged 50 to 74 years the at-home (iFOBT) or, as it’s affectionately known, the poo-test kit.
However, tests are never returned and there is no screening program for those under 50.
With the incidence of early-onset bowel cancer increasing, we need to be able to capture those at increased risk and commence screening at an earlier age.
So how can screening be improved in the most impactful and cost-effective way?
To find out, our team of risk-based colorectal cancer screening within a general practice setting – the first point of call for most of us when it comes to health.
The importance of risk-based screening
Risk-based screening is the way of the future, using more factors than age and family history to determine who needs further screening.
It was recently included as an objective in the draft to “support all Australians to access personalised, evidence-based cancer prevention and early detection strategies”.
In contrast, widespread population-level screening, where the faecal occult blood test kit is sent to everyone aged 50-74, is not designed to identify people at higher risk of developing bowel cancer.
This means that those who might need colorectal cancer screening with a colonoscopy, because they are at higher risk of developing bowel cancer in the future, are not being recommended it.
Conversely, there are many who are at average risk of bowel cancer having unnecessary colonoscopies when the safer and less expensive faecal occult blood test would be sufficient.
Risk-based screening can also identify people at higher risk to start screening at a younger age, catching cancers earlier with the ability to significantly improve outcomes.
The Colorectal cancer RISk Predictor tool (CRISP)
This is where the Colorectal cancer RISk Predictor tool (CRISP) comes in – a that improves appropriate screening for bowel cancer in a general practice setting, developed by Professors Jon Emery, Mark Jenkins, Adrian Bickerstaffe and teams.
CRISP calculates an individual’s personal five-year and lifetime risk of developing bowel cancer and will recommend and encourage the right type of screening for a person’s risk.
And recent research by our team shows how risk-based screening can effectively work in a general practice setting.
This is because CRISP accounts for more than just age and family history to assess someone’s risk of bowel cancer. It also includes like smoking history, weight, diet, and use of medications like aspirin and calcium.
It presents information about the potential benefits and harms of different screening tests and recommends the most appropriate screening (such as the poo-test kit or a colonoscopy) at an individual rather than population level.
Using the CRISP tool has been shown to help people to complete the most appropriate type of screening according to their risk of bowel cancer in those who were due to be screened.
A randomised controlled trial implementing CRISP in GP settings showed that for those people who were due screening, the use of CRISP, being shown how to use the poo-test kit, an SMS reminder and encouragement from their GP resulted in 20 per cent more people doing the appropriate bowel cancer screening.
While researchers recommend the implementation of CRISP within a general practice setting, the CRISP tool is freely available online, so individuals could use it to create a report as a starting point for conversations with their doctor.
By using CRISP in general practice, we hope to contribute to a whole-of-system change needed to help individual Australians access the right bowel cancer screening at the right time.
The CRISP tool was developed as part of an Centre for Research Excellence involving many researchers from the University of Melbourne and external collaborators, including Professor Mark Jenkins, Associate Professor Jennifer McIntosh and Associate Professor Adrian Bickerstaffe.