Feature

CRC blood tests: A future without screening colonoscopies?


 

What the future may hold

Dr. Carethers sees a future in which highly sensitive blood tests are able to largely replace screening colonoscopies. He said that colonoscopies would be used for people who are most in need of diagnosis and treatment. Dr. Carethers addressed these points during an AGA podcast released in January 2023.

In 20-25 years, colonoscopies may be only a therapeutic procedure, much like endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography is now, Dr. Carethers added.

Even if CRC-specific blood tests prove to be effective screening tools, Dr. Ransohoff stressed that colonoscopy will survive. Many people will eventually need to undergo colonoscopy as a diagnostic procedure following a positive blood-based test result, and some may also opt for screening colonoscopies in lieu of frequent blood tests.

And, overall, physicians and patients will need to weigh the trade-offs of a noninvasive test that can only diagnose CRC versus a screening colonoscopy that offers preventative treatment as well.

“The best intent for screening is prevention of cancer, not detection of cancer,” said Dr. Johnson.

Dr. Carethers, Dr. Johnson, and Dr. Ransohoff reporting having no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Life’s Essential 8: Higher scores extend health span
MDedge Internal Medicine
Plant-based diets not always healthy; quality is key
MDedge Internal Medicine
Is it time to stop treating high triglycerides?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Do B vitamins reduce Parkinson’s risk?
MDedge Internal Medicine
New antiobesity drugs will benefit many. Is that bad?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Some diets better than others for heart protection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Analysis identifies gaps in CV risk screening of patients with psoriasis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Cancer risk elevated after stroke in younger people
MDedge Internal Medicine
Ultraprocessed foods and cancer: Small changes may lower risk
MDedge Internal Medicine
High salt intake linked to atherosclerosis even with normal BP
MDedge Internal Medicine