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A new study
by Japanese researchers has found that over half of colon cancers
in the elderly may be missed if sigmoidoscopy is used for screening
in place of colonoscopy.
The explanation
lies in the fact that the frequency of right-sided colon cancer
increases with patient age, and the sigmoidoscope does not reach
the right side of the colon.
The researchers
said that in 191 patients who were found by colonoscopies to have
colon cancer, the proportion with right-sided colon cancer rose
steadily from a low 15 percent of those under 50 years of age
to a high of 57 percent for those over age 80.
"Over
half of colon carcinomas may be missed if sigmoidoscopy alone
is used for screening," the researchers reported in Gastrointestinal
Endoscopy. "The frequency of right-sided colon cancer increases
with patient age. Hence, colonoscopy may be indicated in the elderly
for colorectal cancer screening."
Other
sources: Gastrointestinal Endoscopy
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