Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Researcher­s study impact of pandemic cancer screening pause

- By Marilynn Marchione

John Abraham’s colonoscop­y was postponed for several months because of the pandemic. When he finally got it, doctors found a growth too big to be removed safely during the scope exam. He had to wait several weeks for surgery, then several more to learn it had not yet turned cancerous.

“I absolutely wonder if I had gotten screened when I was supposed to have, if this would have been different” and surgery could have been avoided, said Abraham, a mortgage banker in Peoria, Illinois.

Millions of colonoscop­ies, mammograms, lung scans, Pap tests and other cancer screenings were suspended for several months last spring in the United States and elsewhere as COVID-19 swamped medical care.

Now researcher­s are studying the impact, looking to see how many cancers were missed and whether tumors found since then are more advanced.

Already, there are hints of trouble. University of Cincinnati researcher­s found that when CT scans to check for lung cancer resumed in June, 29% of patients had suspicious nodules versus 8% in prior years.

Multiple studies suggest that fewer cancers were diagnosed last year, likely because of less screening. About 75 cancer organizati­ons recently urged a return to prepandemi­c screening levels as soon as safely possible.

But tumors take years to develop, and some reports suggest that a few months’ delay in screening for certain types of cancer may not have been as bad as feared. For example, researcher­s in the Netherland­s found that a lapse in that country’s mammograph­y program did not lead to more cancers being found at a late stage after screening resumed.

The pandemic also bred some creative solutions, such as wider use of tests that can be done at home. In Philadelph­ia, a large church partnered with local doctors and used its drivethru flu shot program to also pass out stool tests for colon cancer screening.

“We’re not afraid to try anything as it relates to health and wellness,” said the Rev. Leroy Miles of Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church. “The women were encouragin­g men to get the screening, saying, ‘I got my mammogram.’ And I’m saying, ‘ma’am, you have a colon too.’”

SCREENING’S MERITS

Screening tests differ in their risks and benefits, and health experts have long debated who should get which

ones and how often. The pandemic lapse may serve as a “natural experiment” to see their value in modern times versus what’s known from studies done long ago.

Any difference in deaths may not be seen for years, and early detection is only one factor in survival. Treatment also matters and it was hurt by pandemic delays too.

Dr. Ned Sharpless, director of the U.S. National Cancer Institute, estimates there could be nearly 10,000 excess deaths over the next decade because of delayed detection and treatment of breast and colon cancers. Postponing care “was prudent at one time” because of the risks of COVID-19 exposure, but deferring for too long “may turn one public health crisis into many others,” he wrote in the journal

Science.

Based on what’s known about breast cancer deaths from past years in the United States, about 10% “could have been prevented if women were getting routine screening,” but 20% to 25% could have been prevented with appropriat­e treatment, said Dr. Otis Brawley, a Johns Hopkins University professor and former chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society.

“That’s not to say screening is not important, but many people think that cancer screening saves more lives than it actually does,” Brawley said.

A short-term delay may not hurt mortality much if screening resumes quickly, as it needs to do, he said.

Some reassuring news came at a recent American Associatio­n for Cancer Research conference from Sabine Siesling of the Netherland­s Comprehens­ive Cancer Organizati­on. That country offers women ages 50 to 74 a mammogram every two years but stopped in mid-March because of COVID-19. After it resumed in late summer, results “did not show any shift” to more advanced tumors, she reported.

Researcher­s from Massachuse­tts General and Brigham and Women’s Hospital analyzed their screening tests for lung, cervical, colon, prostate and breast cancer. Screening dropped dramatical­ly from March through June but the portion that found cancer or a precancer was higher than usual, suggesting that those who did get screened were at higher risk. When screening returned to near-normal from June to September, the number of potentiall­y “missed” cancers was lower than expected.

GETTING CREATIVE

When 43-year-old actor Chadwick Boseman died of colon cancer last summer, Miles feared for the 12,000 members of his Philadelph­ia church. Black people are more likely to die of the disease than other groups, and there was limited access to colonoscop­ies, which can find and remove growths before they turn cancerous.

Miles, who has drawn more than 1,000 church members to other health events, called the University of Pennsylvan­ia and said, “we know how to get people to come if you’re willing and able to set something up.”

Dr. Carmen Guerra had a federal grant to increase screening in racially diverse communitie­s and realized that home tests could help. Studies show these tests, which look for blood in stool, help save lives. People put a tiny stool sample in a tube and mail it to a lab or, in this case, use a drop box at the church. If blood is found, the next step is colonoscop­y.

Doctors passed out kits in the parking lot during a drive-thru flu shot event in

October. Church members had to watch a video about colon cancer in advance and register to ensure they qualified for screening.

So far, 154 kits have been returned. Stacy Hill was among the 13 who tested positive. The 48-year-old Philadelph­ia woman had just lost her job and health insurance. Her colonoscop­y revealed two growths that, like Abraham’s, were caught before they turned cancerous.

“I was shocked,” Hill said. “I’m a proactive-type person so I was glad to know.”

The doctors also helped her enroll in Medicaid, “so now I have medical insurance” and can continue getting cancer screenings, she said.

The church hopes to offer the home tests again during blood pressure and diabetes screening events this spring.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This February 2021photo shows Stacy Hill, 48, of Philadelph­ia. After she lost her job and health insurance, a colonoscop­y revealed two growths that were caught before they turned cancerous. “I was shocked,” Hill said. “I’m a proactive-type person so I was glad to know.” Doctors also helped her enroll in Medicaid, “so now I have medical insurance” and can continue getting cancer screenings, she said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS This February 2021photo shows Stacy Hill, 48, of Philadelph­ia. After she lost her job and health insurance, a colonoscop­y revealed two growths that were caught before they turned cancerous. “I was shocked,” Hill said. “I’m a proactive-type person so I was glad to know.” Doctors also helped her enroll in Medicaid, “so now I have medical insurance” and can continue getting cancer screenings, she said.
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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 31, 2020photo provided by Dr. Carmen Guerra of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, volunteers work at a drive-thru flu shot event in Stenton, Pa., where they also distribute­d home test kits to detect possible signs of colon cancer. Guerra had a federal grant to increase cancer screening in racially diverse communitie­s and realized that home tests could help fill a gap.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 31, 2020photo provided by Dr. Carmen Guerra of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, volunteers work at a drive-thru flu shot event in Stenton, Pa., where they also distribute­d home test kits to detect possible signs of colon cancer. Guerra had a federal grant to increase cancer screening in racially diverse communitie­s and realized that home tests could help fill a gap.

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