Accuracy of double-contrast barium enema in diagnosing colorectal polyps and cancer
- PMID: 11060920
- DOI: 10.1053/sroe.2000.17754
Accuracy of double-contrast barium enema in diagnosing colorectal polyps and cancer
Abstract
CRC is a common malignancy, and reduced mortality can be achieved through detection and treatment of early cancers and by removal of colonic adenomas. Although current screening recommendations, especially in the average-risk individual, typically promote the use of FOBT and FS, a substantial minority of colonic cancers and many colonic adenomas are not detected by these methods. Modalities that examine the entire colon, such as the barium enema and colonoscopy, can detect most clinically important colorectal neoplasms; however, their additional costs and potential risks have limited their use as initial screening examinations. But recent changes in governmental policies regarding reimbursement for CRC screening and increasing emphasis on total colon examinations have altered these recommendations. This review on the accuracy of the DCBE has emphasized the detection of colonic polyps and cancers and has updated the changing role of this examination in screening patients at variable risk for CRC. The efficacy of the barium enema depends on many factors that radiologists must understand and control to perform accurate examinations. Current recommendations for CRC screening and approved reimbursement of the barium enema for that purpose provide a new impetus to radiologists to maintain and improve their skills in performing and interpreting this radiologic examination. The barium enema may have a future in the new millennium.
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