IBD: New test may predict colorectal cancer with 90% accuracy

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
Close-up view of laboratory blood sample test tubes for colorectal cancerShare on Pinterest
Scientists are working on a new test to predict colorectal cancer in IBD patients. South_agency/Getty Images
  • People with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are at an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer.
  • People with IBD often get screened for colorectal cancer every one to three years via colonoscopies.
  • Past research shows that it can be challenging to detect pre-cancerous cells in people with IBD.
  • Researchers from The Institute of Cancer Research in London have developed a new test that they report can predict bowel cancer risk in people with IBD with 90% accuracy.

Previous research shows that people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — including ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease — are at an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer compared to people who do not have IBD.

People with IBD are at a higher risk of developing colorectal cancer, also known as bowel cancer, due to the chronic inflammation associated with IBD, which can cause the growth of abnormal cells — known as dysplasia — and cause the development of precancerous polyps in the intestinal tract.

Currently, people with IBD are screened for colorectal cancer every one to three years through a colonoscopy. However, past studies show that detecting pre-cancerous cells in people with IBD can be difficult.

Now, researchers from The Institute of Cancer Research in London have developed a new test that they report can predict bowel cancer risk in people with IBD with more than 90% accuracy.

Details on the new test were recently published in the journal Gut.

MNT also spoke with Rudolph Bedford, MD, a board certified gastroenterologist at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, about this study, who praised the study as “wonderful, great, and amazing.”

“The fact of the matter is that our patients who have IBD, we’re doing frequent colonoscopies, biopsies looking for dysplasia or cells or tissue that can lead to cancer. Then we have to have these discussions with them. If they do have these low-grade dysplastic cells, do we take out your colon, or do we do more frequent surveillance? What do we do?” Bedford explained.

“If somebody is going to give me a test that has a 90% accuracy as to those patients with inflammatory bowel disease that might develop cancer, then that’s a wonderful study,” he continued. “It makes my job a lot easier in terms of targeting my therapy, and patients won’t have to undergo these invasive procedures as frequently as we do them now, so I think it’s a great study.”

“If they can make it into a blood test or stool test, that would be wonderful. You want to make it as easy as possible for your patients.”
— Rudolph Bedford, MD

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