1. Beneficial effects of endoscopic screening on gastric cancer and optimal screening interval: a population-based study.
- Author
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Li, Wen-Qing, Qin, Xiang-Xiang, Li, Zhe-Xuan, Wang, Le-Hua, Liu, Zong-Chao, Fan, Xiao-Han, Zhang, Li-Hui, Li, Yi, Wu, Xiu-Zhen, Ma, Jun-Ling, Zhang, Yang, Zhang, Lan-Fu, Li, Ming, Zhou, Tong, Zhang, Jing-Ying, Wang, Jian-Xi, Liu, Wei-Dong, You, Wei-Cheng, and Pan, Kai-Feng
- Subjects
STOMACH tumors ,MEDICAL screening ,EARLY detection of cancer ,ENDOSCOPIC gastrointestinal surgery ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
BACKGROUND : The effectiveness of endoscopic screening on gastric cancer has not been widely investigated in China and the screening interval of repeated screening has not been determined. METHODS : In a population-based prospective study, we included 375,800 individuals, 14,670 of whom underwent endoscopic screening (2012-2018). We assessed the associations between endoscopic screening and risk of incident gastric cancer and gastric cancer-specific mortality, and examined changes in overall survival and disease-specific survival following screening. The optimal screening interval for repeated endoscopy for early detection of gastric cancer was explored. RESULTS : Ever receiving endoscopic screening significantly decreased the risk of invasive gastric cancer (age- and sex-adjusted relative risk [RR] 0.69, 95 % confidence interval [CI] 0.52-0.92) and gastric cancer-specific mortality (RR 0.33, 95 %CI 0.20-0.56), particularly for noncardia gastric cancer. Repeated screening strengthened the beneficial effect on invasive gastric cancer-specific mortality of one-time screening. Among invasive gastric cancers, screening-detected individuals had significantly better overall survival (RR 0.18, 95 %CI 0.13-0.25) and disease-specific survival (RR 0.18, 95 %CI 0.13-0.25) than unscreened individuals, particularly for those receiving repeated endoscopy. For individuals with intestinal metaplasia or low grade intraepithelial neoplasia, repeated endoscopy at an interval of < 2 years, particularly within 1 year, significantly enhanced the detection of early gastric cancer, compared with repeated screening after 2 years (P-trend = 0.02). CONCLUSION : Endoscopic screening prevented gastric cancer occurrence and death, and improved its prognosis in a population-based study. Repeated endoscopy enhanced the effectiveness. Screening interval should be based on gastric lesion severity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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