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‘Out of the blue’: Farmer’s surprise cancer diagnosis after no symptoms

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Sat, 19 Aug 2023, 8:54am

‘Out of the blue’: Farmer’s surprise cancer diagnosis after no symptoms

Author
Isaac Davison,
Publish Date
Sat, 19 Aug 2023, 8:54am

After Graeme Wall received an invitation in the mail to test for bowel cancer, he left the testing kit on the dinner table for six weeks.

The dairy farmer, from 艑torohanga, felt no urgency. Aged 62, he had no family history of cancer, no risk factors, and no symptoms. He was fit and healthy and got up each morning around 6am to work in the milking sheds on his 115-hectare farm.

As the testing kit gathered dust on the table, a tiny cancerous lump was growing inside his bowel.

In May, he eventually decided to send off a stool sample, which came back positive. A colonoscopy confirmed his cancer diagnosis. It was a shock to his partner Bridget and his two children.

鈥淲henever you hear the word cancer you always think the worst,鈥 he told the聽Herald.

But because it was caught early, it had not spread. Wall was able to avoid intensive treatment like chemotherapy and - with the help of private health insurance - get curative surgery around a month after his diagnosis. He is now in remission.

鈥淚鈥檓 extremely grateful for the screening,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 have noticed anything otherwise because I just felt like normal me. No signs of anything. Just out of the blue.鈥

Graeme Wall was invited to screen for bowel cancer after he turned 60. In most countries, the minimum age is 50. Some believe it should be as low as 45, and lower still for M膩ori and Pacific people. Photo / Mike ScottGraeme Wall was invited to screen for bowel cancer after he turned 60. In most countries, the minimum age is 50. Some believe it should be as low as 45, and lower still for M膩ori and Pacific people. Photo / Mike Scott

Wall鈥檚 cancer was one of more than 2000 cases picked up by the national screening programme since it was rolled out in 2017.

Out of concern about resourcing, the scheme was limited to 60-74 year-olds at the time, despite most countries starting at age 50. The eligibility age is gradually being lowered for M膩ori and Pacific people, because they develop bowel cancer earlier.

A growing chorus of voices now says the screening age should be lowered across the board, and possibly lower than 50. Proponents of a lower age cite the success of the existing scheme and evidence that the disease is increasingly affecting younger people.

The national scheme was introduced in 2017 after a trial within the former Waitemat膩 District Health Board.

The first study to look at the outcomes of the Waitemat膩 scheme has just been聽, and its co-authors said its findings strengthened the case for a lower age.

The study, published in the聽ANZ Journal of Surgery, compared the outcomes of patients who were diagnosed with colorectal cancer through the screening programme with patients who were diagnosed outside the programme.

Screened patients were more likely to have early-stage cancers, which were potentially curable. They also had far fewer Stage 4 cancers.

Patients whose cancers were picked up in screening also had a 50 per cent lower chance of dying in the period covered by the study - even when adjusted for age and the stage of their cancer.

鈥淚f you have a bowel cancer and you can get it diagnosed through the screening programme, you are going to do a hell of a lot better,鈥 said Dr Jesse Fischer, a colorectal surgeon at Waikato Hospital and co-author of the study.

Fischer, a Royal Australasian College of Surgeons Fellow, said the study underlined the importance of getting more eligible people to participate in screening. He also said that there was 鈥渋ndisputable evidence鈥 that lowering the screening age to 50 years old would save lives and be cost-effective.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a no-brainer,鈥 said Fischer. 鈥淓veryone in the world is doing it and we should too.鈥

础听New Zealand Medical Journal聽editorial this month聽proposed an even lower screening age, suggesting that it should be set at 45 years old overall and 40 years old for M膩ori and Pacific people.

鈥淭his is particularly important for M膩ori, as 30 per cent of bowel cancer in M膩ori females and 25 per cent in M膩ori males occurs before age 50,鈥 the editorial said.

It highlighted that bowel cancer was increasingly a young person鈥檚 disease, with incidence rates for under-50s rising in New Zealand and overseas.

Comedian Dai Henwood - who has become the public face of bowel cancer in New Zealand after his Stage 4 diagnosis this year - found out he was positive at age 43.

Comedian and TV presenter Dai Henwood was diagnosed with colon cancer at just 43 years old. In New Zealand and overseas, bowel cancer is increasingly affecting younger people.Comedian and TV presenter Dai Henwood was diagnosed with colon cancer at just 43 years old. In New Zealand and overseas, bowel cancer is increasingly affecting younger people.

The Waitemat膩 pilot programme had an age bracket of 50 to 74 years old but this was raised to 60 for the national service because officials were worried about capacity constraints.

Dr Frank Frizelle, colorectal surgeon and聽NZMJ聽editor-in-chief, said he believed it would be possible to lower the age without swamping the system. While around 8 per cent of people screened in the existing scheme were referred for a colonoscopy, the rate would be lower in the 50-59 bracket.

鈥淭here is still an increase in need, but all you are doing is moving the goalposts and dealing with stuff that is going to turn up on your doorstep later - especially with the change in demographics.鈥

Demand could also be managed by having an opt-in system for younger people - as in Australia - or by not requiring all younger people to have a full colonoscopy - instead offering them a more minor procedure.

Asked whether she backed a lower screening age, Health Minister Ayesha Verrall said Te Whatu Ora鈥檚 primary focus was on improving delivery of the existing service to increase participation.

Around 58 per cent of people who receive the testing kits send them back, which is relatively high by international standards. However, the higher-risk groups - M膩ori and Pacific - have lower participation rates, with the Pacific rate especially low at 39 per cent.

Verrall said Te Whatu Ora continued to review the benefits and resources required for further changes to the programme, including expanding its eligibility - especially to address health inequity.

However, she appeared to rule out an eligibility age as low as 45, saying that official advice showed no comparable country was screening people between 45 and 49. Australia allows this age group to request a free test, but they are not invited to take part.

Health Minister Ayesha Verrall said the current focus was on lifting participation in the screening programme. Officials were constantly reviewing the scheme for possible changes, including eligibility, she said. Photo / Mark MitchellHealth Minister Ayesha Verrall said the current focus was on lifting participation in the screening programme. Officials were constantly reviewing the scheme for possible changes, including eligibility, she said. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Too high? The changing age of bowel cancer screening

  • 2011-2017: Pilot scheme in Waitemata DHB, covering 50-74 year-olds
  • 2017-2021: Screening rolled out nationwide, but minimum age raised to 60
  • November 2022: Age lowered to 50 for M膩ori and Pacific in Waikato
  • Late 2023: Age to be lowered for M膩ori and Pacific in Tairawhiti and MidCentral
  • Mid-2024: All M膩ori and Pacific aged 50+ will be eligible

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