Bowel cancer screening to start earlier at age 50 in England

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Bowel cancer cellImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Bowel cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK

Bowel cancer screening in England is to start earlier, at age 50, Public Health England has announced.

It said evidence showed that screening people at a younger age would allow more bowel cancers to be picked up at an earlier stage.

Currently, men and women in England are first invited for screening at the age of 60 and sent a home testing kit.

The change brings England in line with Scotland where bowel screening is automatically offered from 50.

An independent committee of screening experts recently recommended that bowel cancer screening in England should begin 10 years earlier than it does now.

The Health Secretary Matt Hancock has now agreed to the change, and NHS England and Public Health England are deciding how the plan will be rolled out.

A new, improved test, called a faecal immunochemical home test kit or FIT, is being rolled out to everyone age 60 and over in the autumn.

In the future, the plan is to send this more accurate test to everyone in England from the age of 50.

Image source, Science Photo Library
Image caption,
The current home test kits are being improved and will be sent out to everyone from age 50

At present in England, men and women are first invited for bowel cancer screening at 60 and sent a home test kit every two years up to the age of 74.

Using the kit, you collect small samples of your poo and post them to a lab which then checks them for tiny amounts of blood, which could be caused by cancer.

In some areas - around half the country - a one-off bowel scope test is also offered at the age of 55.

This involves a thin, flexible tube with a camera being inserted into the bowel to look for polyps which can turn cancerous.

Only those who have an abnormal result after screening will be offered a colonoscopy.

'Spot abnormalities'

Prof Anne Mackie, director of screening at Public Health England, said: "The risk of bowel cancer rises steeply from around age 50-54 and rates are significantly higher among males than females.

"Starting screening 10 years earlier at 50 will help spot more abnormalities at an early stage that could develop into bowel cancer if not detected."

She added that the change would take time to implement.

Steve Brine, public health minister, said: "With the roll out of FIT as a new bowel screening test from the autumn - a much more convenient and reliable test - we have a real opportunity to reshape our bowel screening programme and potentially detect the stages of bowel cancer much earlier.

"We are now considering opportunities and taking expert advice on how a sustainable, optimal bowel cancer screening programme starting at age 50 can work in the future."

Bowel cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK, with 42,000 people diagnosed every year.

More than 16,000 people die from the cancer annually in the UK.

What are the symptoms of bowel cancer?

  • bleeding from your bottom and/or blood in your poo
  • a persistent and unexplained change in bowel habit
  • unexplained weight loss
  • extreme tiredness for no obvious reason
  • a pain or lump in your tummy

Cancer Research UK said it was delighted by the government's decision to lower the age bowel screening starts.

Sara Hiom, director of early diagnosis at Cancer Research UK, said: "This will mean more cancers can be spotted earlier, saving lives. When bowel cancer is diagnosed at an early stage, 9 in 10 people survive but when it is detected in the late stages, survival falls to 1 in 10."

But she said the biggest challenge was to find enough staff to carry out diagnostic tests, such as colonoscopies, which more people will need when screening is extended.

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