Research News

Colorectal cancer surveillance in the community

Early-stage colorectal cancer (CRC) patients are recommended to get a review every 3-6 months for 5 years after operation for the detection of cancer recurrence. As an increasing number of CRC patients require review post-operation, a greater burden may be placed on specialist clinics. With the availability of standardised surveillance protocols and low risk of cancer recurrence, the transfer of post-operative review to the community and primary healthcare settings might serve to reduce the burden on specialist clinics. This study led by A/Prof. Tan Ker-Kan, investigated the perception of CRC patients towards shifting post-operative care to the community and primary healthcare setting. Overall, the authors found that patients were reluctant to be reviewed outside of the specialist clinics and that more needs to be done to encourage patient acceptance of cancer surveillance care in community and primary care institutions.

Read more: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36401216/

Share this story:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Related Research News

Research News

Next-Generation Sequencing in Metastatic Breast Cancer: A Game Changer for Asian Patients

This study, led by N2CR members Dr Joline Lim and A/Prof David Tan, looks at the use of next-generation sequencing …

Read More →
Research News

Mechanisms of sensitivity and resistance to CDK4/CDK6 inhibitors in hormone receptor-positive breast cancer treatment

Cell cycle dysregulation, a key feature of cancer, leads to excessive cell division. CDK4 and CDK6 are essential for cell …

Read More →
Research News

Macrophage Signatures that Help Predict Lymphoma Patient’s Survival Rate

Macrophages are “big eaters” in our body; they are immune cells that engulf and kill invading organisms and cancer cells. …

Read More →