We thank Wardoyo and Anwar 1 for their valuable feedback and suggestions on our paper. 2 We agree that a thorough investigation of the relationship between screening history and colorectal cancer survival must encompass patient demographics, lifestyle factors, comorbidities, and treatment approaches.In our paper, 2 we analyzed various factors including age at diagnosis, sex, urbanization and hospital levels, colorectal cancer stage and site, treatment, and other clinicopathological variables (Supplementary Table S8), such as grade, tumor size, lymph node ratio, circumferential resection margin, perineural invasion, obstruction, and perforation. Responding to Wardoyo and Anwar, 1 we further adjusted for body mass index, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, and family history of colorectal cancer in patients who had been screened. Despite these adjustments, we found that the association between screening history and colorectal cancer mortality remained largely consistent (Tables 1 and 2).