45 Is the New 50: A Conversation with Dr. Steven Lee-Kong about Colorectal Cancer Screening Guidelines

2D illustration of two medical staff performing a colonoscopy on a patient with a screen showing the colon and scope in it.

Key Takeaways:

  • The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force lowered the age for colorectal cancer screening to 45 due to increasing rates of colon and rectal cancer in younger individuals.
  • Factors such as ethnicity, diet, and lifestyle contribute to the rise in colorectal cancer among younger populations.
  • Screening at 45 is recommended for everyone, with earlier screening advised for those with family history or genetic predispositions, highlighting the importance of preventive measures like colonoscopy.

At the end of October 2020, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force updated their colon cancer screening guidelines to lower the age at which people should begin screening from age 50 to 45—a critical change that reflects a climbing trend of higher rates of colon and rectal cancer in younger people.

We talked to colorectal surgeon Steven Lee-Kong, MD about colon cancer screenings, treatment, and what you need to know.

Let’s start at the top: Why is 45 the new 50 for colorectal screening age?

There's been an increase in the incidence of colon and rectal cancer in the U.S. amongst people under the age of 50, and so that was the impetus to change the screening recommendation. Based on the data, there are probably several reasons why we see an increase in incidence in younger people.

One may just be that routine screening of patients 50 and older is now catching polyps and preventing cancers in that age group and above, so it looks like there's a shift in the incidence to those younger than 50 because they hadn't been screened. Whether or not we should have been screening people younger than 50 all along is unclear. And there may be other factors involved as well.

It’s important to know that the incidence actually goes up as you get older. So, 60-year-olds are higher than 50-year-olds, and so forth, but I think we've changed the perceived incidence just based on the fact that screening has become a lot more widespread over the last decade or two.

Are there external factors or environmental factors contributing to the rise of colorectal cancer in more and more younger people?

Again, hard to know. I think we know that certain ethnic groups, racial groups, are at higher risk of both developing colorectal cancer and death from colorectal cancer, specifically African Americans. And as the demographics of our country have changed over time, that may be also playing into why there's an increase in incidence in younger people.

Diet plays a role, we think. Again, the development of colorectal cancer is probably multifactorial, but diets that are low in fiber, and high in red meat are thought to be risk factors for the development of cancer and smoking as well.

Is there anyone exempt from starting colorectal screenings at age 45 or is this recommended for everyone across the board?

Right now, it's recommended for everyone across the board, starting at age 45. Those who have a significant family history—so a first-degree relative with advanced neoplasia or cancers, multiple family members in a group—should be screened earlier, depending on the age at which that index family member developed their cancer. For example, if you have a brother or sister who was 40 when they were diagnosed with colorectal cancer, all of their first-degree relatives should be screened 10 years prior to that, so starting at age 30.

Very important to know.

Patients who have a known genetic predisposition should also be screened earlier, based on those separate guidelines. So, patients with a family history or a personal history of Lynch syndrome or FAP [familial adenomatous polyposis]— genetic cancer syndromes that predispose to the development of colorectal cancer—should be screened earlier.

How young is young in the context of colorectal cancer? Have you treated patients in their twenties?

The youngest rectal cancer patient that I've taken care of outside of someone with known family history, I think, was 21.

Wow. Colorectal cancer is frequently referred to as a “silent killer” because often there are no symptoms, but what are symptoms when they do occur?

For patients that are found to have cancer because of a symptom, it's things like bleeding, darkening of their stools, weight loss. Abdominal pain is not that common, but patients who present with large cancers who have either a partial or complete obstruction can present with it. Generally, it's bleeding, weight loss, and things like that.

Are there any other screening tests, other than colonoscopy, that people should know about?

There are. One is called Cologuard. It's a stool-based test in which a stool sample is collected at home and mailed to a lab to be analyzed for DNA changes consistent with the development of colon cancer or an advanced polyp. If that test comes back positive, those patients are recommended to have a colonoscopy to assess.

You can also get a CT scan, which is called a virtual colonoscopy or a CT colonography. It’s also a noninvasive test. You still have to do a bowel prep as you would for a routine visual colonoscopy with a colonoscope, but it does avoid the need for sedation and the actual instrumentation required for a colonoscopy.

How do you recommend screening options? Are there instances when one method may be better than another?

It’s always a conversation. I talk to patients about all the options. Most patients in my practice will tend to want a "real" colonoscopy because you have the opportunity to intervene if you see anything. If you see a large polyp or something smaller, you can certainly remove that polyp and prevent it from developing into cancer. But for patients who are unwilling or unable to undergo a traditional colonoscopy for whatever reason, these other options are available.

For someone who's getting preventive colonoscopies and they're coming back negative, how often should they be getting a colonoscopy? Has that recommendation changed?

As long as the prep is good, it’s still every 10 years.

Will you explain the difference between colon cancer and rectal cancer?

The rectum is the end part of the gastrointestinal tract that's probably the last 12 to 15 centimeters of the large intestine, right before the anus. Cancers in the colon are treated differently than cancers in the rectum for a number of reasons. Biologically they act quite differently, in terms of recurrence, risk, and how they're treated. The bigger issue is rectal cancers are treated differently for patients with locally advanced rectal cancers, because quite often patients will get neoadjuvant treatment before an operation, so chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy prior.

For colon cancer, there generally isn't neoadjuvant treatment that's needed. Once the cancer is diagnosed and they've been staged, meaning they've gotten cross-sectional imaging to exclude metastatic disease, the treatment algorithm jumps right to surgery to remove that section of the intestine. For rectal cancer, we can more adequately stage the primary tumor. Several studies have demonstrated that if you're able to pre-treat those tumors prior to surgery the patients do better long term. So that's really the big difference between colon cancers and rectal cancers.

What’s the most important thing you tell your patients?

The most important thing is to get a colonoscopy. Many patients, people in my family, for example, are hesitant to get colonoscopies for various reasons. They could be cultural reasons or medical reasons. They've known someone who's had a bad experience with a colonoscopy, or a lot of patients are just unhappy with the bowel prep that needs to happen the day before. So, I reassure patients that colonoscopy is very safe.

Colon and rectal cancers are one of the few cancers we can actually prevent by doing something, and that's getting a colonoscopy. For patients who have had polyps removed at the time of colonoscopy, I reassure them that once I get the pathology back, which usually takes only a couple of days, we'll have a more detailed discussion about what happens next. As long the polyps are benign, I'd recommend their next colonoscopy, again, depending on the number of polyps that we removed, and the quality of the bowel preparation.

For patients with a cancer diagnosis, then it really depends on where it is—if it's colon or rectum. But usually, the next step would be to stage them, to get cross-sectional imaging to again look for metastatic disease.

Is there anything new about cancer treatment to know?

There are always technical advances in the management of these patients, whether it's robotic surgery or other types of minimally invasive surgery. The management of rectal cancer specifically is quite interesting in that there's an ongoing paradigm shift in how we treat patients, in terms of the types of neoadjuvant treatment that we offer.

For some patients with rectal cancer, that neoadjuvant treatment—meaning the treatment they would get upfront before an operation—can sometimes lead to cure. We don't quite know what patients are more likely to experience that "pathologic" complete response yet, but there are research efforts ongoing to try and figure out which patients would benefit the most from certain types of neoadjuvant treatment.

Wow. Does that make treatment for rectal cancer more complicated?

You know, with rectal cancer treatments, it can be quite confusing to patients. I tell patients all the time that you could go to five different colorectal surgeons with the same patient, with the same rectal cancer, and you may get three different recommendations because of how quickly things are changing in the field.

You can give patients three or four different options and each one is reasonable depending on the patient. And it can lead to some confusion on the part of the patient because now they're trying to juggle the risks and benefits of two or three different treatment options.

I’m sure you often get patients who have already seen other physicians and have gotten different recommendations. What’s your process in that case? How do you present treatment options?

I reassure patients that for rectal cancer this is the spot that we're in as a society in terms of management, particularly in patients with locally advanced disease. Sometimes there isn't a wrong answer. It's just that there are three different treatment routes you can go down, each one is reasonable in its own regard, and you help the patients wade through the risks and benefits of each approach. You help the patient decide what they'd like to do.

Will you expand on the differences a bit? The risks and benefits?

The addition of radiation has its own inherent risks in terms of collateral damage to tissues in the pelvis, the development of other cancers down the road, like sarcomas and prostate cancers and such. Radiation specifically can cause damage to the skin in the pelvis.

I saw a patient today who had radiation for anal cancer and now has vaginal stenosis and is having a series of interventions coming up to try and address that problem. So, lots of patients are interested in not getting radiation if they can avoid it, which is perfectly reasonable. There are certain patients where we think that their best option is to have radiation.

Whether or not a patient is going to need a stoma [an opening on the abdomen connected to the digestive system to divert waste out of the body] during an operation or after an operation is also a consideration for patients. Having a temporary stoma, while it may be temporary, does have its own host of issues that patients need to deal with. The discomfort of having a temporary bag, having to learn how to manage the bag, the psychosocial issues that go along with that, and the need to have another operation to get off that stoma, can cause a lot of anxiety for patients. And it's expensive just in terms of buying supplies and another operation and so forth.

Do you want to close us out with any final thoughts?

You know, the death of Chadwick Boseman from metastatic colon cancer really galvanized a lot of patients to come in and get screened. I've had several African American patients who've come in in the last couple months specifically for that reason. They saw that Black Panther died and no one had any idea that he had colon cancer.

I'm a huge Marvel comics fan and have watched every movie multiple times. You can ask my kids that, I make them watch with me. And no one knew. I didn't know that he was struggling with this, and he had been struggling with this for a long time. He was in his early 40s when he passed and I think that's galvanized a lot of patients, particularly African American patients to really think seriously about getting colonoscopies. That's a patient population that, traditionally, doctors have had a harder time getting in for screening exams. That’s really significant, one silver lining. Colonoscopies save lives.

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