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QJM Advance Access originally published online on May 8, 2006
QJM 2006 99(6):389-395; doi:10.1093/qjmed/hcl053
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Association of Physicians. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Colonoscopy first for iron-deficiency anaemia: a Numbers Needed to Investigate approach

M.R. Stephens1, A.N. Hopper1, S.R. White1, S. Jugool1, R. Stratford1, W.G. Lewis1 and M.C. Allison2,

From the Departments of 1Surgery and 2Gastroenterology, Royal Gwent Hospital, Newport, UK

Address correspondence to Dr M. Allison, Department of Adult Medicine, Royal Gwent Hospital, Cardiff Road, Newport NP20 2UB. email: miles.allison{at}gwent.wales.nhs.uk

Received 20 December 2005 and in revised form 22 March 2006

Background: British Society of Gastroenterology guidelines recommend that gastrointestinal investigations should be considered in males and post-menopausal women presenting with iron-deficiency anaemia (IDA).

Aim: To compare the diagnostic yields and clinical effectiveness of upper and lower gastrointestinal (GI) investigation in detecting malignancy among patients presenting with IDA.

Design: Retrospective review of case notes, endoscopy records and radiology reports.

Methods: We reviewed the results of 3798 investigations in 2600 patients presenting to our hospital with IDA from October 1995 to December 2003. The findings of the 2318 gastroscopies were compared with those of the 896 colonoscopies and the 584 barium enemas. Patients diagnosed with GI malignancy were identified and their outcomes determined.

Results: Gastroscopy identified 44 patients with newly-diagnosed upper GI cancer (18 oesophageal, 26 gastric). Thus for patients being gastroscoped for IDA, the Numbers Needed to Investigate (NNI) to detect each cancer was 53. Five-year survival for these 44 patients was 10%, so the NNI to identify each curable upper GI malignancy was 527. Colonoscopy or barium enema identified 111 (7.5%) patients with newly diagnosed colorectal cancer, giving a NNI of 13. Their 5-year survival was 35%, giving a NNI to identify each curable colorectal cancer patient of 38.

Discussion: Potentially curable gastrointestinal malignancy was diagnosed over 13 times more commonly using colonoscopy or barium enema vs. gastroscopy. For patients presenting with IDA, our findings favour investigating the lower GI tract first, or performing both gastroscopy and colonoscopy during the same endoscopy list.


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