Colorectal cancer screening with Fecal Immunochemical Test
Description
According to the World Health Organization report, colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide. Several CRC screening methods are available that include stool-based tests to detect blood (guaiac fecal occult blood test and fecal immunochemical test-FIT), endoscopic methods (sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy), imaging methods (computed tomographic (CT) colonography, video capsule endoscopy), and biomarkers. Since 2019, the recommendation Worldwide for colorectal cancer screening in individuals aged 50 to 74 is a fecal immunochemical test (FIT). Erie Shores Health Care (ESHC) serves rural and remote Canadians spanning the Greater Windsor-Essex County area, located in Ontario, which includes Caldwell First Nation, Migrant Agricultural Workers, the Mennonite community, and the un-documented or documented refugee population. We noticed that many individuals attending the ESHC-Surgery facility for colonoscopy were either unaware of the FIT test or were not offered an FIT test before colonoscopy. The objective is to provide insight into the reasons for the under-utilization of the FIT test for CRC screening and guidance for an effective screening strategy for our region. An exploration into the utilization of FIT in the Windsor-Essex region with a retrospective data-driven analysis using the region's existing data is the proposed methodology. This study may aid hospital administration and clinicians in visualizing a realistic snapshot of FIT test utilization in the region, prompting the identification of possible barriers to FIT test utilization that are critical for improving uptake of and adherence to CRC screening. The publication will contribute knowledge on FIT test utilization in rural/remote Canadian healthcare systems.
Colorectal cancer screening with Fecal Immunochemical Test
According to the World Health Organization report, colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer worldwide. Several CRC screening methods are available that include stool-based tests to detect blood (guaiac fecal occult blood test and fecal immunochemical test-FIT), endoscopic methods (sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy), imaging methods (computed tomographic (CT) colonography, video capsule endoscopy), and biomarkers. Since 2019, the recommendation Worldwide for colorectal cancer screening in individuals aged 50 to 74 is a fecal immunochemical test (FIT). Erie Shores Health Care (ESHC) serves rural and remote Canadians spanning the Greater Windsor-Essex County area, located in Ontario, which includes Caldwell First Nation, Migrant Agricultural Workers, the Mennonite community, and the un-documented or documented refugee population. We noticed that many individuals attending the ESHC-Surgery facility for colonoscopy were either unaware of the FIT test or were not offered an FIT test before colonoscopy. The objective is to provide insight into the reasons for the under-utilization of the FIT test for CRC screening and guidance for an effective screening strategy for our region. An exploration into the utilization of FIT in the Windsor-Essex region with a retrospective data-driven analysis using the region's existing data is the proposed methodology. This study may aid hospital administration and clinicians in visualizing a realistic snapshot of FIT test utilization in the region, prompting the identification of possible barriers to FIT test utilization that are critical for improving uptake of and adherence to CRC screening. The publication will contribute knowledge on FIT test utilization in rural/remote Canadian healthcare systems.
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/we-spark-conference/2025/postersessions/56