提高结直肠癌筛查的使用和质量。

Debra J Holden, Russell Harris, Deborah S Porterfield, Daniel E Jonas, Laura C Morgan, Daniel Reuland, Michael Gilchrist, Meera Viswanathan, Kathleen N Lohr, Brieanne Lyda-McDonald
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:对适当的结直肠癌(CRC)筛查的使用和质量(包括使用不足、过度和滥用)进行系统回顾,包括与筛查相关的因素、提高筛查率的有效干预措施、现有能力以及监测和跟踪使用和质量。本文还介绍了CRC筛查试验的使用和质量趋势。资料来源:我们检索了MEDLINE、Cochrane图书馆和Cochrane中央试验注册库,并辅以手工检索,检索了1998年1月至2009年9月间发表的英文研究。综述方法:我们采用标准的循证实践中心方法,对摘要、全文文章、摘要、质量评定和质量分级进行双重综述。我们以一致意见解决分歧。结果:我们发现了CRC筛查使用不足、过度和误用的多重问题。我们共确定了116篇文章纳入系统评价,其中72篇研究符合关键问题(KQ) 2, 21篇符合KQ 3, 12篇符合KQ 4, 8篇符合KQ 5。许多患者层面的因素与较低的筛查率有关,包括低收入或受教育程度较低,无保险或西班牙裔或亚裔,未适应美国文化,以及较少或较少获得医疗服务。有保险、收入或教育程度较高、非西班牙裔白人、参加其他癌症筛查、有结直肠癌家族史或个人有其他癌症病史,以及接受医生建议进行筛查,这些都与较高的筛查率相关。有效增加结直肠癌筛查的干预措施包括患者提醒、一对一互动、消除结构性障碍和系统层面的改变。最大程度的改善来自一对一的互动和消除障碍。纯教育性的小型媒体干预并不能提高筛查率。尽管某些设计可能有效,但关于决策辅助的证据却参差不齐。没有研究测试干预措施以减少CRC筛查的过度使用或误用。我们没有发现评估CRC筛查使用不足、过度和误用监测系统的研究。使用各种假设的建模研究表明,如果美国采用仅结肠镜检查的方法进行CRC筛查,并且每个人都同意以这种方式进行筛查,那么结肠镜检查的能力很可能需要大幅提高。结论:无论是CRC筛查还是对CRC筛查的医患讨论均未得到充分利用,并且存在过度使用和误用的重要问题。一些干预措施有望有所改善。研究的重点是设计和测试干预措施,以增加筛查和CRC筛查的讨论,建立在本综述中确定的有效方法的基础上,并根据特定人群的需求进行调整。此外,应设计和试验减少过度使用和误用的新干预措施,同时研究与反馈和持续改进工作有关的正在进行的监测系统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Enhancing the use and quality of colorectal cancer screening.

Objectives: To conduct a systematic review of the use and quality (including underuse, overuse, and misuse) of appropriate colorectal cancer (CRC) screening, including factors associated with screening, effective interventions to improve screening rates, current capacity, and monitoring and tracking the use and quality. Trends in the use and quality of CRC screening tests is also presented.

Data sources: We searched MEDLINE, the Cochrane Library, and the Cochrane Central Trials Registry, supplemented by handsearches, for studies published in English from January 1998 through September 2009.

Review methods: We used standard Evidence-based Practice Center methods of dual review of abstracts, full text articles, abstractions, quality rating, and quality grading. We resolved disagreements by consensus.

Results: We found multiple problems of underuse, overuse, and misuse of CRC screening. We identified a total of 116 articles for inclusion into the systematic review, including a total of 72 studies qualified for inclusion for key question (KQ) 2, 21 for KQ 3, 12 for KQ 4, and 8 for KQ 5. A number of patient-level factors are associated with lower screening rates, including having low income or less education, being uninsured or of Hispanic or Asian descent, not being acculturated into the United States, and having less or reduced access to care. Being insured, of higher income or education, and non-Hispanic white, participating in other cancer screenings, having a family history of CRC or personal history of another cancer, as well as receiving a physician recommendation to be screened, are associated with higher screening rates. Interventions that effectively increased CRC screening with high strength of evidence include patient reminders, one-on-one interactions, eliminating structural barriers, and system-level changes. The largest magnitude of improvement came from one-on-one interactions and eliminating barriers. Purely educational small-media interventions do not improve screening rates. Evidence is mixed for decision aids, although certain designs may be effective. No studies tested interventions to reduce overuse or misuse of CRC screening. We found no studies that assessed monitoring systems for underuse, overuse, and misuse of CRC screening. Modeling studies, using various assumptions, show that if the United States were to adopt a colonoscopy-only approach to CRC screening and everyone were to agree to be screened in this way, it is likely that colonoscopy capacity would need to be substantially increased.

Conclusions: Both CRC screening and patient-physician discussions of CRC screening are underused, and important problems of overuse and misuse also exist. Some interventions hold promise for improvement. The research priority is to design and test interventions to increase screening and CRC screening discussions, building on the effective approaches identified in this review, and tailored to specific population needs. In addition, new interventions to reduce overuse and misuse should be designed and tested, along with studies of ongoing monitoring systems that are linked to feedback and continued improvement efforts.

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