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The situation is this. If you have polyps, and roughly 50% of people over 65 do have polyps, there is a 5% chance that any of them will ever develop into cancer. The problem is 5% of 50% of the whole population is a lot of cancer cases.

Lifetime risk is about 4%. After age 70 it becomes less clear that screening should continue, because your life expectancy is coming into play and you may die of something else. If you have a family history that 4% increases.

The FIT test concept is that the polyp that is going to develop into cancer will bleed before that happens.

The scope means different things at different ages. It’s mostly a routine screen at younger ages, but at older ages it is as much a removal mechanism as it is a screening mechanism because the number of polyps are just so large in the population.


5 posted on 05/19/2023 11:20:28 PM PDT by Owen
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To: Owen

Interesting...


7 posted on 05/20/2023 2:54:28 AM PDT by GOPJ (How many 'intelligence' goons & thugs live in mansions on $180,000 a year? And drive expensice cars?)
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