Bowel cancer - Screening 

How screening for bowel cancer works 

Bowel cancer can be present for a long time before any symptoms appear. If bowel cancer is detected before symptoms appear, it is easier to treat and there is a better chance of surviving the disease.

The NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Programme in England started in July 2006. Men and women aged 60-69 who are registered with a GP will automatically be sent an invitation for screening through the post. The screening programme will be extended in England to those aged 70 to 75 from 2010. At the moment, if you are aged 70 or over, you can choose to participate by requesting a screening kit.

Screening consists of a home testing kit, called an FOBt (faecal occult blood test) kit. The kit arrives through the post when screening is due. The kit is used to collect tiny stool samples on a special card. The card is then sealed in a special hygienic freepost envelope and sent to a laboratory where it will be checked for traces of blood, which may indicate a problem.

Results

Results are received in writing within two weeks of sending in the test kit. There are three types of result:

  • Normal: no blood was found in the samples. Screening will be offered again in two years’ time.
  • Unclear: there were possible traces of blood that could be caused by factors other than cancer, such as haemorrhoids (piles) or stomach ulcers. If you have an unclear result, you will be asked to repeat the test kit up to twice more.
  • Abnormal: blood was definitely found in the samples. Again, this could be from piles or bowel polyps (small growths which are usually not cancerous). If you have an abnormal result, you will be offered an appointment with a specialist nurse to discuss having an examination of the bowel, called a colonoscopy.

Colonoscopy

A colonoscopy is an investigation of the lining of the large bowel (colon). A thin flexible tube with a tiny camera on the end is passed into your bottom and guided around the bowel. Only around 2 in every 100 people completing the FOBt kit will have an abnormal result and will be offered a colonoscopy. Of those who have a colonoscopy, only about 1 in 10 will have cancer.

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Last reviewed: 04/10/2010

Next review due: 04/10/2012

Comments are personal views. Any information they give has not been checked and may not be accurate.

SPOCK33 said on 28 June 2011

I was first screened over 2 years ago with a negative result. As I haven't received another test kit I called the helpline to check, to be informed that my file was closed!

It has now been reopened & a kit is on its way. My advice is to make sure that you receive your test kit in good time. It could save your life!

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