Site icon Scientific Inquirer

GI cancer detection rates higher during lockdown, but fewer cancers found.

person looking out the window

Photo by null xtract on Pexels.com

HAVE YOUR SAY.

We are proud to announce the inaugural session of The Bullpen, where the members of the Scientific Inquirer community get to shape the site’s editorial decision making. We’ll be discussing people and companies to profile on the site. On Wednesday June 8th at 5:30pm EST, join us on Discord and let’s build the best Scientific Inquirer possible.


RE-TRIAGING endoscopies to make more urgent cases the priority during Melbourne’s COVID-19 lockdowns led to higher cancer detection, according to research published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

However, with less cases performed due to the lockdown, overall numbers of cancers found were lower.

The study, conducted by Dr Daniel Schneider from Monash Health and colleagues, was a retrospective analysis of endoscopic procedures at Monash Health during the 2020 lockdowns (24 March – 1 May, 2 August – 28 September 2020) and the corresponding periods in 2019.



“A total of 1147 endoscopic procedures were performed during the two lockdowns; no patients were diagnosed with COVID-19,” Schneider and colleagues reported.

“This number was 42% lower than during the corresponding periods of 2019 (1972 procedures), but the overall cancer detection rate was higher (2020: 77, 6.7% of all procedures; 2019: 89, 4.5%).

“Colonoscopy detection indicators — the adenoma (2020: 138 of 426 colonoscopies, 32.4%; 2019: 256 of 906; 28.3%) and sessile serrated polyp detection rates (2020: 17 of 426, 4.0%; 2019: 40 of 906, 4.4%) — were similar for the two periods.

“Despite the higher cancer detection rate and the similar quality indicator values, 55 fewer cases of cancer were detected than expected had the number of procedures been the same in 2020 as in 2019.”

Schneider and colleagues concluded that “by enhancing patient selection using guideline-based re-triage, we increased our overall cancer detection rate during a period of limited access and resources”.

“Although our missing cancer rate was not as high as reported elsewhere, prompt restoration of endoscopy volume should be a focus of pandemic recovery.”


Microbes frozen in ancient rubbish heaps help reconstruct ancient Greenlanders’ farms, seal hunts, and toilets
Microbiologists studied Greenland's ancient middens, revealing historical bacterial diversity and antimicrobial resistance, …
DAILY DOSE: Ancient Plague Rewrites Disease History; Russia Drills Deep for Endless Oil Theory.
Ancient DNA analysis reveals a plague outbreak around 5,500 years ago, predating …

Exit mobile version