Many years ago Uncle Sam sent me to Rockford Illinois to repay my National Health Service Corps scholarship by providing medical services to the medically indigent population of Winnebago County. Rockford population about 150,000 was the second largest city in Illinois and, to this California boy, rather provincial.
At the time I arrived, the HIV epidemic was raging. In Rockford, most of the victims were iv drug users, their partners, and their children. HIV wasn’t really a gay thing in Rockford because when a gay Rockfordian was old enough to leave town, he did—usually for Chicago.
Faced with the epidemic, I asked my Rockford colleagues why no one had started a needle exchange program. “Oh,” I was told, “we can’t do that here. Rockford is a conservative town…”
But I digress.
Rockford is in the medical news big time this week because of a study just published in the December 15 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine . The study looked at colonoscopies performed by twelve gastroenterologists practicing in Rockford. The main conclusion of the study was that the longer the gastroenterologist took to do the colonoscopy, the more likely he was to find an advanced neoplasm—a polyp that showed precancerous changes.
The immediate result of this will be for every gastroenterologist who performs colonoscopies to slow down! Colonoscopy is considered the gold standard of screening tests for colorectal cancer. Colonoscopy is more likely to find a neoplasm than simple sigmoidoscopy, which only looks at part of the colon. Colonoscopy is also considered more sensitive for finding early neoplasms than is fecal occult blood testing. And in recent years, both “virtual colonoscopies” (colonoscopy by helical CT scanning) and tumor DNA screening of stool have been proposed as alternatives.
The DNA screening test is apparently very sensitive—88%–for all stages of colorectal cancer and is entirely non-invasive. Results of a trial of the test will be published in the January 2007 issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.
To return to Rockford, I want to add that I was treated very well during my time there. The local medical community was welcoming and helpful. I had many opportunities to stay on in Rockford. But I’m a California kid.
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