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274 results on '"Callum G. Fraser"'

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1. Sex variation in colorectal cancer mortality: trends and implications for screening

2. Comparison with first round findings of faecal haemoglobin concentrations and clinical outcomes in the second round of a biennial faecal immunochemical test based colorectal cancer screening programme

3. Replicate and repeat faecal immunochemical tests in symptomatic patients: A systematic review

4. Analytical performance specifications for the measurement uncertainty of 24,25-dihydroxyvitamin D examinations

5. Do faecal test-based colorectal cancer screening pilots provide data that are reflected in subsequent programmes? Evidence from interval cancer proportions

6. Faecal haemoglobin concentrations in women and men diagnosed with colorectal cancer in a national screening programme

7. Improved use of faecal immunochemical tests for haemoglobin in the Scottish bowel screening programme

8. The Effect of the Variability in Fecal Immunochemical Test Sample Collection Technique on Clinical Performance

9. Faecal haemoglobin concentration thresholds for reassurance and urgent investigation for colorectal cancer based on a faecal immunochemical test in symptomatic patients in primary care

10. Strategies to minimise the current disadvantages experienced by women in faecal immunochemical test-based colorectal cancer screening

11. One or two faecal immunochemical tests in an organised population-based colorectal cancer screening programme in Murcia (Spain)

12. Association between faecal occult bleeding and medicines prescribed for chronic disease: a data linkage study

13. Biological variation: a still maturing aspect of laboratory medicine

14. Variación biológica: un aspecto de la medicina de laboratorio aún en desarrollo

15. Faecal haemoglobin can define risk of colorectal neoplasia at surveillance colonoscopy in patients at increased risk of colorectal cancer

16. Faecal haemoglobin distributions by sex, age, deprivation and geographical region: consequences for colorectal cancer screening strategies

17. Faecal haemoglobin concentration in adenoma, before and after polypectomy, approaches the ideal tumour marker

18. A comparison of the faecal haemoglobin concentrations and diagnostic accuracy in patients suspected with colorectal cancer and serious bowel disease as reported on four different faecal immunochemical test systems

19. Faecal immunochemical tests in the COVID-19 pandemic; safety-netting of patients with symptoms and low faecal haemoglobin concentration – can a repeat test be used?

20. Measurement of faecal haemoglobin with a faecal immunochemical test can assist in defining which patients attending primary care with rectal bleeding require urgent referral

22. Randomized controlled trial: Flexible sigmoidoscopy as an adjunct to faecal occult blood testing in population screening

23. Plasma creatinine medians from patients partitioned by gender and age used as a tool for assessment of analytical stability at different concentrations

24. A dynamic reference change value model applied to ongoing assessment of the steady state of a biomarker using more than two serial results

25. Analytical performance specifications for 25-hydroxyvitamin d examinations

26. Assuring the quality of examinations using faecal immunochemical tests for haemoglobin (FIT)

27. Yield of colorectal cancer at colonoscopy according to faecal haemoglobin concentration in symptomatic patients referred from primary care

28. Variation in changes in the incidence of colorectal cancer by age and association with screening uptake: an observational study

29. Use of fecal immunochemical testing in patients presenting in primary care with lower GI symptoms

30. Scottish Bowel Screening Programme colonoscopy quality - scope for improvement?

31. Gender-partitioned patient medians of serum albumin requested by general practitioners for the assessment of analytical stability

32. Participation in bowel screening among men attending abdominal aortic aneurysm screening

33. Valid analytical performance specifications for combined analytical bias and imprecision for the use of common reference intervals

35. Uptake trends in the Scottish Bowel Screening Programme and the influences of age, sex, and deprivation

36. The fecal hemoglobin concentration, age and sex test score: Development and external validation of a simple prediction tool for colorectal cancer detection in symptomatic patients

37. Transition to quantitative faecal immunochemical testing from guaiac faecal occult blood testing in a fully rolled-out population-based national bowel screening programme

38. Changes in prevalence of faecal occult blood positivity over time

39. Impact of introducing a faecal immunochemical test (FIT) for haemoglobin into primary care on the outcome of patients with new bowel symptoms: a prospective cohort study

40. Do other variables add value to assessment of the risk of colorectal disease using faecal immunochemical tests for haemoglobin?

42. Appraisal of the faecal haemoglobin, age and sex test (FAST) score in assessment of patients with lower bowel symptoms: an observational study

43. Faecal Haemoglobin Concentration As a Predictor of Colorectal Neoplasia in Patients at Moderate to High Risk of Colorectal Cancer Attending for Surveillance Colonoscopy

44. A comparative effectiveness trial of two faecal immunochemical tests for haemoglobin (FIT). Assessment of test performance and adherence in a single round of a population-based screening programme for colorectal cancer

45. Comparison of quantitative faecal immunochemical tests for haemoglobin (FIT) for asymptomatic population screening

46. Different percentages of false-positive results obtained using five methods for the calculation of reference change values based on simulated normal and ln-normal distributions of data

47. Interval cancers using a quantitative faecal immunochemical test (FIT) for haemoglobin when colonoscopy capacity is limited

48. Faecal haemoglobin concentration is related to detection of advanced colorectal neoplasia in the next screening round

49. Optimal Analytical Performance for POCT

50. Occult blood in faeces is associated with all-cause and non-colorectal cancer mortality

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