JCO Global Oncology (Jan 2024)

Fecal Immunochemical Testing and the Risk of Advanced Colorectal Neoplasia: A Difference-In-Difference Analysis

  • Guanglu Zhang,
  • Yiying Wang,
  • Lizhong Zhao,
  • Mingqing Zhang,
  • Weihua Zhang,
  • Weituo Zhang,
  • Shiwu Zhang,
  • Huan Zhang,
  • Dezheng Wang,
  • Yijia Wang,
  • Li Xie,
  • Biyun Qian,
  • Xipeng Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.23.00188
Journal volume & issue
no. 10

Abstract

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PURPOSETo evaluate the effectiveness of fecal immunochemical testing (FIT) in colorectal cancer screening.METHODSWe conducted a prospective cohort study among 5,598 participants age 40-74 years between 2012 and 2020 in Tianjin, China. Inverse probability weighting was adopted to adjust for potential imbalanced factors between groups. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to estimate the weighted associations between FIT screening and advanced colorectal neoplasia. A difference-in-difference (DID) model was adopted to compare the incidence rates of advanced colorectal neoplasia between groups.RESULTSIn DID analysis, the rate of incidence was reduced by 0.34 cases per person-years in the screening group as compared with the historical FIT screening group (rate ratio [RR], 0.08 [95% CI, 0.07 to 0.10]) and by 0.06 cases per person-years in the non-FIT screening group as compared with the historical non-FIT screening group (RR, 0.37 [95% CI, 0.29 to 0.48]; P < .001 for both comparisons), with a relative reduction of 0.28. Similar benefit effect from FIT screening was observed in sex and age subgroups.CONCLUSIONFIT screening was associated with a reduction in incidence density from advanced colorectal neoplasia.