9: Secondary Prevention & Screening Flashcards

1
Q

What is secondary prevention?

A

Reducing the impact of a disease that has already occurred - finding hidden/unmanifested disease

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2
Q

What can screening pick up on?

A
  • small size and stage cancers
  • pre-invasive lesions (DCIS, CIN)
  • dysplasia phase (eg CRC polyps)
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3
Q

What are the WHO screening principles?

A
  • condition should be an important health risk
  • natural history should be well understood
  • recognizable early stage
  • early treatment should be beneficial
  • there should be a suitable, acceptable test
  • adequate facilities for diagnosis and treatment
  • repeat screening at interval for disease of insidious onset
  • physical and psychological harm should be less than benefit of detection
  • costs should be balanced against benefits
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4
Q

Ho do you measure sensitivity?

A

True positive / (true positive + false negative)

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5
Q

How do you measure specificity?

A

True negative / (true negative + false positive)

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6
Q

How do you calculate the positive predictive value of a positive test result?

A

PPV = TP/ (TP+FP)

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7
Q

What is the positive predictive value?

A

% of patients with a positive test that actually have the disease

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8
Q

How do you calculate the negative predictive value of a negative test result?

A

NPV = TN / (TN + FN)

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9
Q

When is the most effective time for screening during the natural history of cancer?

A

Before symptomatic presentations and metastatic spread.
Optimal if metastatic spread is also before symptoms present

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10
Q

What are the downsides of screening?

A
  • labels a person as increased risk of cancer
  • psychological impact
  • impact of turnaround times
  • success depends on uptake
  • financial considerations for those attending screening
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11
Q

Fill in the blanks:
__-__% of bowel cancers develop from benign adenomatous ___ lining the bowel wall.
The adenoma-adenocarcinomas sequence takes approximately __ years, with up to __ years before symptoms develop.
The ___ test is used for bowel cancer screening

A
  1. 70-90%
  2. Polyps
  3. 10
  4. 15
  5. FIT
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12
Q

What does bowel cancer aim to detect?
What does it look for?

A

Aims to detect: early stage bowel cancer or polyps.
Looks for: occult blood in the stool

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13
Q

What cohort does bowel cancer screen and how often?

A

Men and women aged 60-74 every 2 years

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14
Q

What are the advantages of the FIT test?

A
  • detects only human haemoglobin
  • associated with higher programmed uptake
  • objective numerical result (increased sensitivity)
  • only one sample required
  • more sensitive than gFOB
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15
Q

Describe bowel scope screening?

A

Uses a camera, sigmoidscopy.
Aged 55
From 60 onwards, you can do a home test kit instead

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16
Q

List the histological types of polyps

A
  • tubular
  • villous
  • tubuvillous
  • flat/depressed
  • serrated adenomas
  • mixed adenomas
  • polyp not identified
17
Q

What are the ratios of normal results : polyps detected : cancer detected in colonoscopy?

A

Normal result 5/10
Polyps 4/10
Cancer 1/10
5:4:1