Study finds advanced adenomas similarly prevalent in white, black populations

New research published in Gastroenterology examined advanced adenomas in black and white populations.

Advertisement

The researchers analyzed nine studies examining prevalence values for advanced adenomas or advanced precancerous colorectal neoplasms covering 302,128 average risk black and white individuals to perform a meta-analysis to determine difference in risk.

The overall prevalence of advanced adenomas or advanced precancerous colorectal neoplasms did not differ greatly between black (6.5 percent) and white (6.20 percent) individuals.

“In this meta-analysis, we found the overall prevalence of AA and ACN did not differ significantly between average-risk black and white persons, indicating that the age at which to begin colorectal cancer screening need not differ based on race,” the researchers concluded.

Click here to read the full study

More articles on gastroenterology:
GI societies slam CMS decision to side with Anthem, devalue GI codes — 5 insights
AI improves polyp detection during colonoscopy: 6 things to know
GI leader to know: Dr. David Cohen of NewYork-Presbyterian

Advertisement

Next Up in GI & Endoscopy

Advertisement

Comments are closed.