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Essex contributed to the independent evaluation of the UK NHS Bowel Cancer Screening Pilot programme by conducting the psychosocial aspects of this research. The evaluation recommended full roll-out, and was used to inform the programme's subsequent development and implementation. Nationwide screening for 60-69 year olds, using the Faecal Occult Blood test, began in 2006 and in 2010 the programme was extended to include adults up to their 75th birthday. Since July 2006 over 17 million screening episodes have been completed and 15,000 cancers detected. It is estimated that the programme is on track to cut deaths by 16%.
Antenatal screening aims to identify genetic carriers of sickle cell/thalassaemia in order to provide prospective parents with "informed choice". Throughout the period January 2008-July 2013, the NHS in England has used a Family Origins Questionnaire in connection with sickle cell/thalassaemia screening derived from our research programme. The original policy issue concerned whether or not it is possible/desirable to target antenatal screening for sickle cell/thalassaemia by means of an ethnicity question. The policy problem was that socially constructed "ethnicity" categories correspond imperfectly and to an unknown degree with actual prevalence of genetic carriers. The screening question based on our research now guides the offer of initial screening and/or further laboratory tests for all pregnant mothers in England.
Research undertaken at the University of Sheffield in 2005 to evaluate the cost-effectiveness and resource implications of potential screening programmes for colorectal cancer informed the decision to launch a national colorectal cancer screening programme in England. Upon their 60th/61st birthday, all individuals in England are now invited to participate in biennial bowel cancer screening using faecal occult blood testing (FOBT) until the age of 74. The programme identifies individuals with less advanced colorectal cancer and there is emerging evidence that it has led to an overall improvement in prognosis. Projections suggest that the programme is on course to reduce colorectal cancer deaths by 16%.
Amongst others, follow-on research includes an options appraisal of screening in Ireland that has informed national policy and a re-appraisal of colorectal screening options following publication of a pivotal trial of flexible sigmoidoscopy (FSIG) screening for NHS Cancer Screening Programmes.
Our evidence that a single flexible sigmoidoscopy (FS) dramatically reduced bowel cancer mortality and incidence, combined with evidence of high public acceptability in our pilot programme, led the Prime Minister to announce in late 2010 that once-only FS would be included in the UK National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme. The new FS screening programme started in March 2013 in six pilot centres, and is being progressively implemented nationally, with full roll-out expected by 2016. All eligible adults will be invited for screening around the time of their 55th birthday using the invitation and bowel preparation protocols developed for the trial. If uptake rates similar to those in the pilot are achieved, bowel cancer rates could be cut by a quarter, and deaths by a third, giving the UK the best colorectal cancer (CRC) outcomes in the world.
Professor Peter Sasieni's team at Queen Mary showed that the efficacy of cervical screening was age-dependent. Their recommendations were adopted as policy in England in 2003 and led many other countries, including the USA, to raise the recommended age of first screening. This research was central to the 2009 re-evaluation of the most appropriate age for first screening in England, resulting in some 300,000 fewer screening tests per year in women aged 20-24, with a cost saving to the NHS of some £15 million annually. Annually, 45,000 fewer women now have an abnormal cervical screening test, of which an estimated 8,500 would have received unnecessary surgical treatment. The estimated annual saving to the NHS is £17.5 million.
The Nottingham Bowel Cancer Screening trial showed that biennial Faecal Occult Blood testing reduced bowel cancer mortality by 16%. As a consequence of this trial, the Department of Health launched two screening pilots and introduced a National Bowel Cancer Screening Programme (NBCSP), achieving national coverage in 2010. Since 2008, this has sent out almost 18 million invitations and detected 16,000 bowel cancers, of which 21.6% were early cancers with a 95% chance of cure. It is estimated that the NBCSP saves around 3,500 lives each year in the UK. International screening programmes modelled on the UK system will save many more.
Research by Professor Judith Stephenson and colleagues at the UCL Institute of Women's Health into the effectiveness of chlamydia screening has led to guidance to health policy makers in the EU about national strategies for chlamydia control, and has influenced NICE guidelines on the subject. In particular, our work has informed debate on the value for money of the National Chlamydia Screening Programme (NCSP). Stephenson advised the National Audit Office on this topic, and a resulting report led to the NCSP focusing on chlamydia testing in sexual health services and primary care rather than screening in low risk groups. These changes are expected to make considerable cost savings to the NHS.
School dental screening was a statutory function of the NHS. University of Manchester (UoM) research demonstrated that the national screening programme was ineffective and likely to increase inequalities in health and service utilisation. As a direct result of UoM research, the National Screening Committee recommended that the national programme should stop. This changed Departments of Health policy resulting in new guidance to the NHS, which stopped the screening programme and redirected resources to treatment services for vulnerable groups and prevention programmes. In 2010 in England the costs of a national screening programme were estimated to be £17m per year; money released for reallocation to other dental services.
Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) affect more than 4% of British men aged 65-74 and are responsible for over 6,800 deaths annually. The MASS trial showed that screening could reduce AAA-related mortality by 42%, and the Health Economics Research Group (HERG) demonstrated, through the MASS trial, that AAA screening was cost-effective. HERG thus helped inform the policy announced by UK ministers in 2008 to introduce a national screening programme for all men reaching 65. By Spring 2013 it was fully introduced in England — offering screening to 300,000 men annually; the latest Annual Report (2011-12) claimed an uptake rate of 75%. In 2008 the DH estimated the health gain from a screening programme would be at least 130,000 QALYS over 20 years. Internationally, MASS is the most significant trial of AAA screening, and provides the most robust evidence-based model of its cost-effectiveness. It extensively influenced AAA screening guidelines, policies and services, including in the USA and Europe.
Congenital heart defects are a leading cause of infant death, accounting for more deaths than any other type of malformation and up to 7.5% of all infant deaths. Timely diagnosis is crucial for the best possible outcome for these children. However, the accuracy of current methods for screening for critical congenital heart defects (CCHD) before birth is variable and currently only detects these defects in between 35-50% of cases. Although around a third of remaining cases are picked up after birth, up to a third of children with a CCHD are sent home, where they may become unwell or die. Research led by Dr Andrew Ewer at the University of Birmingham has demonstrated that pulse oximetry is a rapid, safe, non-invasive, painless method of detecting the low blood oxygen levels associated with CCHD, and is also a cost-effective approach. As a result of Dr Ewer's research, Pulse Ox was recommended for adoption across the US in 2011 by the Secretary for Health and Human Services, and Dr Ewer has been instrumental in this screening approach being taken up worldwide. This research prompted a national UK review of screening for these conditions.