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Letters, FIT kits can triple colon cancer screening rates

UT Southwestern Medical Center Sep 21, 2017

Sending a letter and, in some cases, a simple mail-in kit tripled colon cancer screening completion among low-income adults, researchers at UT Southwestern’s Simmons Cancer Center reported in JAMA journal.

Two groups of 2,400 uninsured or underinsured, at-risk adults who were patients at Parkland Health & Hospital, the safety-net provider in Dallas, were mailed letters urging them to be screened for colon cancer:
  • Group 1 received a letter suggesting they get a colonoscopy.
  • Group 2 received a letter and an easy-to-use, at-home test kit called FIT (fecal immunochemical test).
Both groups were compared with a similar group of 1,200 at-risk patients who were told during doctor visits to get tested, but received no additional outreach. After three years, researchers found:
  • 38 percent of those receiving just letters completed screening
  • 28 percent of those receiving FIT completed screening
  • 10 percent of those who did not receive follow-up after being told to get tested completed screening
“The good news is that, looking at three-year process completion, both outreach strategies tripled screening completion compared to the usual, visit-based care. The bad news is that about a third of the people who did FIT did not do it once a year as indicated,” said Dr. Ethan Halm, Director of UT Southwestern’s Center for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research and a member of the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, one of just 49 National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers in the nation. There are lessons in this study for patients, lessons for physicians, and lessons for health care systems, the researchers said.

“The lesson for patients is to understand that the stool blood test (FIT) strategy is an every-year thing – not one-and-done. The challenge for physicians in primary care is to communicate more effectively that the home FIT kit strategy requires the need for an annual test, as well as follow-up colonoscopy, if the test is positive. The lesson for large health systems is to know that an easy-to-execute outreach strategy will markedly increase screening rates for your population,” said Dr. Halm, Chief of the William T. and Gay F. Solomon Division of General Internal Medicine.

Furthermore, given limited colonoscopy capacity in many health care systems, increasing education on how to correctly use FIT and increase screening uptake is called for, said Dr. Singal.
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