BACKGROUND: Inappropriate use of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening procedures can inflate healthcare costs and increase medical risk. Little is known about the prevalence or causes of inappropriate CRC screening. OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to estimate the prevalence of potentially inappropriate CRC screening, and its association with patient and facility characteristics in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) . DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS: We conducted a crosssectional study of all VHA patients aged 50 years and older who completed a fecal occult blood test (FOBT) or a screening colonoscopy between 1 October 2009 and 31 December 2011 (n=1,083,965). MAIN MEASURES: Measures included: proportion of patients whose test was classified as potentially inappropriate; associations between potentially inappropriate screening and patient demographic and health characteristics, facility complexity, CRC screening rates, dependence on FOBT, and CRC clinical reminder attributes. KEY RESULTS: Of 901,292 FOBT cases, 26.1 % were potentially inappropriate (13.9 % not due, 7.8 % limited life expectancy, 11.0 % receiving FOBT when colonoscopy was indicated). Of 134,335 screening colonoscopies, 14.2 % were potentially inappropriate (10.4 % not due, 4.4 % limited life expectancy). Each additional 10 years of patient age was associated with an increased likelihood of undergoing potentially inappropriate screening (ORs=1.60 to 1.83 depending on screening mode). Compared to facilities scoring in the bottom third on a measure of reliance on FOBT (versus screening colonoscopy), facilities scoring in the top third were less likely to conduct potentially inappropriate FOBTs (OR=0.,78) but more likely to conduct potentially inappropriate colonoscopies (OR=2.20). Potentially inappropriate colonoscopies were less likely to be conducted at facilities where primary care providers were assigned partial responsibility (OR=0.74) or full responsibility (OR=0.73) for completing the CRC clinical reminder.
CONCLUSIONS:A substantial number of VHA CRC screening tests are potentially inappropriate. Establishing processes that enforce appropriate screening intervals, triage patients with limited life expectancies, and discourage the use of FOBTs when a colonoscopy is indicated may reduce inappropriate testing. I n 2014, an estimated 136,830 Americans will be diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC), 1 and an estimated 50,310 will die of the disease. 1 Appropriately applied, routine screening can reduce both CRC incidence and mortality. 2 Thus, many health organizations, including the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), have invested heavily in programs to increase CRC screening. Clinical reminder systems are now commonly used to alert providers at the point of care when patients are due for screening. CRC screening performance measures are now included in most quality measurement systems. In the VHA, CRC screening rates are used as one measure of the quality of care provided by physicians, clinics and facilities, and can affect clinician and administrator compe...