Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries: an international, population-based study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries : an international, population-based study. / Cardoso, Rafael; Guo, Feng; Heisser, Thomas; De Schutter, Harlinde; Van Damme, Nancy; Nilbert, Mef Christina; Tybjerg, Anne Julie; Bouvier, Anne Marie; Bouvier, Véronique; Launoy, Guy; Woronoff, Anne Sophie; Cariou, Mélanie; Robaszkiewicz, Michel; Delafosse, Patricia; Poncet, Florence; Walsh, Paul M.; Senore, Carlo; Rosso, Stefano; Lemmens, Valery E.P.P.; Elferink, Marloes A.G.; Tomšič, Sonja; Žagar, Tina; Lopez de Munain Marques, Arantza; Marcos-Gragera, Rafael; Puigdemont, Montse; Galceran, Jaume; Carulla, Marià; Sánchez-Gil, Antonia; Chirlaque, María Dolores; Hoffmeister, Michael; Brenner, Hermann.

In: The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Vol. 7, No. 8, 2022, p. 711-723.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cardoso, R, Guo, F, Heisser, T, De Schutter, H, Van Damme, N, Nilbert, MC, Tybjerg, AJ, Bouvier, AM, Bouvier, V, Launoy, G, Woronoff, AS, Cariou, M, Robaszkiewicz, M, Delafosse, P, Poncet, F, Walsh, PM, Senore, C, Rosso, S, Lemmens, VEPP, Elferink, MAG, Tomšič, S, Žagar, T, Lopez de Munain Marques, A, Marcos-Gragera, R, Puigdemont, M, Galceran, J, Carulla, M, Sánchez-Gil, A, Chirlaque, MD, Hoffmeister, M & Brenner, H 2022, 'Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries: an international, population-based study', The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, vol. 7, no. 8, pp. 711-723. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X

APA

Cardoso, R., Guo, F., Heisser, T., De Schutter, H., Van Damme, N., Nilbert, M. C., Tybjerg, A. J., Bouvier, A. M., Bouvier, V., Launoy, G., Woronoff, A. S., Cariou, M., Robaszkiewicz, M., Delafosse, P., Poncet, F., Walsh, P. M., Senore, C., Rosso, S., Lemmens, V. E. P. P., ... Brenner, H. (2022). Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries: an international, population-based study. The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 7(8), 711-723. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X

Vancouver

Cardoso R, Guo F, Heisser T, De Schutter H, Van Damme N, Nilbert MC et al. Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries: an international, population-based study. The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2022;7(8):711-723. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X

Author

Cardoso, Rafael ; Guo, Feng ; Heisser, Thomas ; De Schutter, Harlinde ; Van Damme, Nancy ; Nilbert, Mef Christina ; Tybjerg, Anne Julie ; Bouvier, Anne Marie ; Bouvier, Véronique ; Launoy, Guy ; Woronoff, Anne Sophie ; Cariou, Mélanie ; Robaszkiewicz, Michel ; Delafosse, Patricia ; Poncet, Florence ; Walsh, Paul M. ; Senore, Carlo ; Rosso, Stefano ; Lemmens, Valery E.P.P. ; Elferink, Marloes A.G. ; Tomšič, Sonja ; Žagar, Tina ; Lopez de Munain Marques, Arantza ; Marcos-Gragera, Rafael ; Puigdemont, Montse ; Galceran, Jaume ; Carulla, Marià ; Sánchez-Gil, Antonia ; Chirlaque, María Dolores ; Hoffmeister, Michael ; Brenner, Hermann. / Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries : an international, population-based study. In: The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology. 2022 ; Vol. 7, No. 8. pp. 711-723.

Bibtex

@article{b0cd2a837ae243efa8becf50e4cf27d8,
title = "Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries: an international, population-based study",
abstract = "Background: The effects of recently implemented colorectal cancer screening programmes in Europe on colorectal cancer mortality will take several years to be fully known. We aimed to analyse the characteristics and parameters of screening programmes, proportions of colorectal cancers detected through screening, and stage distribution in screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancers to provide a timely assessment of the potential effects of screening programmes in several European countries. Methods: We conducted this population-based study in nine European countries for which data on mode of detection were available (Belgium, Denmark, England, France, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia, and Spain). Data from 16 population-based cancer registries were included. Patients were included if they were diagnosed with colorectal cancer from the year that organised colorectal cancer screening programmes were implemented in each country until the latest year with available data at the time of analysis, and if their age at diagnosis fell within the age groups targeted by the programmes. Data collected included sex, age at diagnosis, date of diagnosis, topography, morphology, clinical and pathological TNM information based on the edition in place at time of diagnosis, and mode of detection (ie, screen detected or non-screen detected). If stage information was not available, patients were not included in stage-specific analyses. The primary outcome was proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected versus non-screen detected colorectal cancers. Findings: 228 667 colorectal cancer cases were included in the analyses. Proportions of screen-detected cancers varied widely across countries and regions. The highest proportions (40–60%) were found in Slovenia and the Basque Country in Spain, where FIT-based programmes were fully rolled out, and participation rates were higher than 50%. A similar proportion of screen-detected cancers was also found for the Netherlands in 2015, where participation was over 70%, even though the programme had not yet been fully rolled out to all age groups. In most other countries and regions, proportions of screen-detected cancers were below 30%. Compared with non-screen-detected cancers, screen-detected cancers were much more often found in the distal colon (range 34·5–51·1% screen detected vs 26·4–35·7% non-screen detected) and less often in the proximal colon (19·5–29·9% screen detected vs 24·9–32·8% non-screen detected) p≤0·02 for each country, more often at stage I (35·7–52·7% screen detected vs 13·2–24·9% non-screen detected), and less often at stage IV (5·8–12·5% screen detected vs 22·5–31·9% non-screen detected) p<0·0001 for each country. Interpretation: The proportion of colorectal cancer cases detected by screening varied widely between countries. However, in all countries, screen-detected cancers had a more favourable stage distribution than cancers detected otherwise. There is still much need and scope for improving early detection of cancer across all segments of the colorectum, and particularly in the proximal colon and rectum. Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe.",
author = "Rafael Cardoso and Feng Guo and Thomas Heisser and {De Schutter}, Harlinde and {Van Damme}, Nancy and Nilbert, {Mef Christina} and Tybjerg, {Anne Julie} and Bouvier, {Anne Marie} and V{\'e}ronique Bouvier and Guy Launoy and Woronoff, {Anne Sophie} and M{\'e}lanie Cariou and Michel Robaszkiewicz and Patricia Delafosse and Florence Poncet and Walsh, {Paul M.} and Carlo Senore and Stefano Rosso and Lemmens, {Valery E.P.P.} and Elferink, {Marloes A.G.} and Sonja Tom{\v s}i{\v c} and Tina {\v Z}agar and {Lopez de Munain Marques}, Arantza and Rafael Marcos-Gragera and Montse Puigdemont and Jaume Galceran and Mari{\`a} Carulla and Antonia S{\'a}nchez-Gil and Chirlaque, {Mar{\'i}a Dolores} and Michael Hoffmeister and Hermann Brenner",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2022 Elsevier Ltd",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "711--723",
journal = "The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology",
issn = "2468-1253",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancer in nine European countries

T2 - an international, population-based study

AU - Cardoso, Rafael

AU - Guo, Feng

AU - Heisser, Thomas

AU - De Schutter, Harlinde

AU - Van Damme, Nancy

AU - Nilbert, Mef Christina

AU - Tybjerg, Anne Julie

AU - Bouvier, Anne Marie

AU - Bouvier, Véronique

AU - Launoy, Guy

AU - Woronoff, Anne Sophie

AU - Cariou, Mélanie

AU - Robaszkiewicz, Michel

AU - Delafosse, Patricia

AU - Poncet, Florence

AU - Walsh, Paul M.

AU - Senore, Carlo

AU - Rosso, Stefano

AU - Lemmens, Valery E.P.P.

AU - Elferink, Marloes A.G.

AU - Tomšič, Sonja

AU - Žagar, Tina

AU - Lopez de Munain Marques, Arantza

AU - Marcos-Gragera, Rafael

AU - Puigdemont, Montse

AU - Galceran, Jaume

AU - Carulla, Marià

AU - Sánchez-Gil, Antonia

AU - Chirlaque, María Dolores

AU - Hoffmeister, Michael

AU - Brenner, Hermann

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Elsevier Ltd

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Background: The effects of recently implemented colorectal cancer screening programmes in Europe on colorectal cancer mortality will take several years to be fully known. We aimed to analyse the characteristics and parameters of screening programmes, proportions of colorectal cancers detected through screening, and stage distribution in screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancers to provide a timely assessment of the potential effects of screening programmes in several European countries. Methods: We conducted this population-based study in nine European countries for which data on mode of detection were available (Belgium, Denmark, England, France, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia, and Spain). Data from 16 population-based cancer registries were included. Patients were included if they were diagnosed with colorectal cancer from the year that organised colorectal cancer screening programmes were implemented in each country until the latest year with available data at the time of analysis, and if their age at diagnosis fell within the age groups targeted by the programmes. Data collected included sex, age at diagnosis, date of diagnosis, topography, morphology, clinical and pathological TNM information based on the edition in place at time of diagnosis, and mode of detection (ie, screen detected or non-screen detected). If stage information was not available, patients were not included in stage-specific analyses. The primary outcome was proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected versus non-screen detected colorectal cancers. Findings: 228 667 colorectal cancer cases were included in the analyses. Proportions of screen-detected cancers varied widely across countries and regions. The highest proportions (40–60%) were found in Slovenia and the Basque Country in Spain, where FIT-based programmes were fully rolled out, and participation rates were higher than 50%. A similar proportion of screen-detected cancers was also found for the Netherlands in 2015, where participation was over 70%, even though the programme had not yet been fully rolled out to all age groups. In most other countries and regions, proportions of screen-detected cancers were below 30%. Compared with non-screen-detected cancers, screen-detected cancers were much more often found in the distal colon (range 34·5–51·1% screen detected vs 26·4–35·7% non-screen detected) and less often in the proximal colon (19·5–29·9% screen detected vs 24·9–32·8% non-screen detected) p≤0·02 for each country, more often at stage I (35·7–52·7% screen detected vs 13·2–24·9% non-screen detected), and less often at stage IV (5·8–12·5% screen detected vs 22·5–31·9% non-screen detected) p<0·0001 for each country. Interpretation: The proportion of colorectal cancer cases detected by screening varied widely between countries. However, in all countries, screen-detected cancers had a more favourable stage distribution than cancers detected otherwise. There is still much need and scope for improving early detection of cancer across all segments of the colorectum, and particularly in the proximal colon and rectum. Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe.

AB - Background: The effects of recently implemented colorectal cancer screening programmes in Europe on colorectal cancer mortality will take several years to be fully known. We aimed to analyse the characteristics and parameters of screening programmes, proportions of colorectal cancers detected through screening, and stage distribution in screen-detected and non-screen-detected colorectal cancers to provide a timely assessment of the potential effects of screening programmes in several European countries. Methods: We conducted this population-based study in nine European countries for which data on mode of detection were available (Belgium, Denmark, England, France, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Slovenia, and Spain). Data from 16 population-based cancer registries were included. Patients were included if they were diagnosed with colorectal cancer from the year that organised colorectal cancer screening programmes were implemented in each country until the latest year with available data at the time of analysis, and if their age at diagnosis fell within the age groups targeted by the programmes. Data collected included sex, age at diagnosis, date of diagnosis, topography, morphology, clinical and pathological TNM information based on the edition in place at time of diagnosis, and mode of detection (ie, screen detected or non-screen detected). If stage information was not available, patients were not included in stage-specific analyses. The primary outcome was proportion and stage distribution of screen-detected versus non-screen detected colorectal cancers. Findings: 228 667 colorectal cancer cases were included in the analyses. Proportions of screen-detected cancers varied widely across countries and regions. The highest proportions (40–60%) were found in Slovenia and the Basque Country in Spain, where FIT-based programmes were fully rolled out, and participation rates were higher than 50%. A similar proportion of screen-detected cancers was also found for the Netherlands in 2015, where participation was over 70%, even though the programme had not yet been fully rolled out to all age groups. In most other countries and regions, proportions of screen-detected cancers were below 30%. Compared with non-screen-detected cancers, screen-detected cancers were much more often found in the distal colon (range 34·5–51·1% screen detected vs 26·4–35·7% non-screen detected) and less often in the proximal colon (19·5–29·9% screen detected vs 24·9–32·8% non-screen detected) p≤0·02 for each country, more often at stage I (35·7–52·7% screen detected vs 13·2–24·9% non-screen detected), and less often at stage IV (5·8–12·5% screen detected vs 22·5–31·9% non-screen detected) p<0·0001 for each country. Interpretation: The proportion of colorectal cancer cases detected by screening varied widely between countries. However, in all countries, screen-detected cancers had a more favourable stage distribution than cancers detected otherwise. There is still much need and scope for improving early detection of cancer across all segments of the colorectum, and particularly in the proximal colon and rectum. Funding: Deutsche Krebshilfe.

U2 - 10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X

DO - 10.1016/S2468-1253(22)00084-X

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35561739

AN - SCOPUS:85133625358

VL - 7

SP - 711

EP - 723

JO - The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology

JF - The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology

SN - 2468-1253

IS - 8

ER -

ID: 344649455