Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Hurricane Milton & Hurricane Helene

Emergency procedures are in place in multiple states due to Hurricane Milton & Hurricane Helene. >>Learn More

Colorectal Cancer Screening Age Decreases to 45

Image of A patient sits in an office with while a health care provider talks to her. U.S. Navy Cmdr. Candida Ferguson, a general surgeon at Naval Hospital Jacksonville, talks with a patient about colorectal cancer screening. The Defense Health Agency established new age recommendations for screenings. Regular screening with a stool test, sigmoidoscopy, or colonoscopy, beginning at age 45, is the key to preventing colorectal cancer and finding it early. (Photo: Deidre Smith, Naval Hospital Jacksonville)

Although the overall death rate from colorectal cancer has been on the decline in recent years, it remains the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States. There has also been an increase in colorectal cancer-related death for people younger than 55, and an increase in diagnosis in patients between the ages of 40-49 over the past decade, according to the National Cancer Institute.

With this new upwards trend, national health guidelines recently lowered the initial screening age from 50 to 45. This change means that an additional 21 million Americans will be eligible for screening.

In the Military Health System, the estimated impact of the lower age recommendation is that over 200,000 additional beneficiaries will need to be screened for CRC, according to Dr. Chin Hee Kim, deputy chief of specialty care support of the Defense Health Agency Directorate of Medical Affairs.

The new DHA guidelines also offer various CRC screening options, including expanding the use of a stool-based test known as Fecal Immunochemical Test, or FIT, as an alternative to a colonoscopy.

“Colorectal cancer screening, and preventive screenings in general, are important for overall wellness and healthy living. The MHS strives to implement evidence-based strategies to optimize both prevention and early detection of serious diseases before they become major,” Kim said. “Preventive care helps to sustain your health, meet standards for duty fitness, and maintain medical readiness.”

There is a 5-year survival rate of approximately 90%, if colorectal cancer is detected early.

When Should You Be Screened for Colorectal Cancer?

“Beginning at age 45, all average-risk men and women should undergo routine CRC screening,” said Kim.

Patients are considered to be at average risk if they:

  • Do not have a personal history of CRC or certain types of polyps.
  • Do not have a family history of CRC.
  • Do not have a personal history of inflammatory bowel disease.
  • Do not have a confirmed or suspected hereditary CRC syndrome.

According to Kim, CRC might not cause symptoms right away, but if you have one of these symptoms, you should see a doctor.

  • Rectal bleeding with bright red blood.
  • A change in bowel habits, such as diarrhea, constipation, or narrowing of the stool that lasts for more than a few days.
  • A feeling that you need to have a bowel movement that's not relieved by having one.
  • Blood in the stool, which might make the stool look dark brown or black.
  • Cramping or abdominal pain.
  • Unintended weight loss.

Kim said, “The screening method for CRC is based on shared decision making between the provider and the patient after discussing risks and benefits of all available screening options. A colonoscopy can be offered for both average risk and high-risk patients. The goal is to inform our beneficiaries about all screening options, including FIT, to optimize overall CRC screening for the MHS.”

Increasing Usage of FIT as a Tool

“While we have made great strides in colon cancer screening and prevention over the last several decades, around one-third of the U.S. population is not up-to-date on testing. By educating patients and providers about evidence-based alternatives to colonoscopy such as FIT, we are striving to expand access to screening to as many patients as we possibly can,” said U.S. Navy Lt. Brett Sadowski, program director of gastroenterology fellowship at the Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Command in San Diego.

Of the existing stool-based testing available, FIT is one of the most sensitive and cost-effective screening tests for colon cancer screening. The FIT is an easy to use, non-invasive, stool-based test that can be done at home.

The test must be done every year, but many people find them more convenient than other tests like a colonoscopy,” said Kim.

Instead of having to undergo an invasive procedure like a colonoscopy, one can collect their stool sample at home and mail it to the lab in provided packaging. Importantly, if a positive test result occurs, the patient should understand that a colonoscopy needs to be performed to complete the screening process. Like all screening tests, patients should be aware of following limitations of FIT, which include:

  • May miss tumors that bleed in small amounts or not at all.
  • Lower sensitivity to detect a potential pre-cancerous lesion in the colon.
  • Essential need to be repeated annually.

“The MHS is also working with clinicians to communicate and standardize workflow that incorporates the new age recommendation along with the appropriate use of FIT for average-risk patients. Medical logistics is also ensuring that FIT supplies are available at all military treatment facilities,” Kim said.

Lifestyle Changes Could Reduce Risks

Adopting healthy lifestyle habits can lower your risk of these types of cancer.

“Lifestyle factors play a profound role in our ability to impact our gut microbiome to support gut health. For all individuals, but especially for those who are at highest risk, lifestyle factors play an important role in reducing the risk of colorectal cancer,” U.S. Air Force Col. Mary A. Kiel, chief of the Air Force Medical Home Program at Air Force Medical Readiness Agency.

Along with a healthy diet, other “lifestyle factors such as reducing body weight, limiting alcohol, quitting smoking, and engaging in regular physical activity can have a profound positive impact on reducing risk,” said Kiel.

TRICARE Benefits

TRICARE covers colorectal cancer screenings for average-risk beneficiaries beginning at the age of 45 years old. It will cover the following types of screenings:

  • Fecal Immunochemical Testing: One stool sample once every 12-months.
  • Fecal Immunochemical Testing: Stool DNA tests once every 1-3 years.
  • Fecal Occult Blood Testing: Three consecutive stool samples once every 12 months.
  • Flexible sigmoidoscopy: Once every 5-years.
  • Optical colonoscopy: Once every 10 years.
  • Computed Tomographic Colonography: Once every 5 years.
  • Flexible Sigmoidoscopy: Every 10 years with FIT every year.

If you have concerns, need more information about colorectal cancer, or meet any of the screening guidelines, it is recommended you talk to your doctor.

You also may be interested in...

Topic
Aug 30, 2024

Medical and Dental Preventive Care Fitness

Medical and Dental Preventive Care Fitness is your ability to sustain your health and wellness and facilitate restoration to meet medical and dental standards for fitness for duty, return to duty, and medical readiness.

Video
Dec 7, 2023

Dr. Kelly Elmore Addresses Postpartum Hemorrhage

Dr Kelly Elmore Addresses Postpartum Hemorrhage

As we know, most births are very happy, wonderful experiences. However, there are times when there are complications. Now, these complications, for the most part, happen less than 5% of the time. But there is one that we want to talk to you about specifically, and that's called postpartum hemorrhage. Postpartum hemorrhage is when you have too much ...

Infographic
Nov 29, 2023

Cervical Health Awareness Month

Cervical Cancer Awareness Month

Cervical cancer is one of the most common cancers in women, but you can lower your risk through regular screenings and vaccinations. Get info on @TRICARE coverage and get screened today: www.tricare.mil/CoveredServices/IsItCovered/CancerFemaleReproductiveOrgans #CervicalHealthAwarenessMonth #WomensHealth

Video
Nov 20, 2023

Schedule Your Annual Well-Woman Exam Today

Schedule Your Annual Well-Woman Exam Today

CAPT Kelly Elmore, MD, OB/GYN and Chief of Staff at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center encourages you to schedule your annual well-woman exam. Cervical Cancer screening is your covered TRICARE benefit. Depending on your age, a pap smear and/or HPV test are recommended to screen for cervical cancer. Make sure you take time today for your ...

Video
Nov 20, 2023

A Regular Pap Smear Helps Detect Cervical Cancer

A Regular Pap Smear Helps Detect Cervical Cancer

CAPT Kelly Elmore, MD, OB/GYN and Chief of Staff at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center explains the purpose of pap smears. Cervical Cancer screening is your covered TRICARE benefit. Depending on your age, a pap smear and/or HPV test are recommended to screen for cervical cancer. Make sure you take time today for your health and schedule ...

Article
Nov 20, 2023

The Madness We Survive

U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Matilyn Million, 6th Medical Support Squadron laboratory technician, stands next to her coworkers during a chemotherapy appointment in Tampa, Florida, on Aug. 21, 2023. Million was diagnosed with stage III Hodgkin’s lymphoma in March 2023. She completed her 12th and final chemotherapy treatment on Sept. 18, 2023, and is currently cancer free. (Courtesy Photo)

A renewed spirit to resume the life she previously had consumed U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Matilyn Million as she closed her most difficult chapter. On Sept. 18, 2023, Million underwent her 12th and final chemotherapy treatment in Tampa, Florida.

Article
Nov 1, 2023

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Champions Women's Health Care Options Using Minimally Invasive Hysterectomy Surgery

Dr. Candice Jones-Cox, the Women's Health Services director at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is all smiles after becoming the first surgeon in the Department of Defense medical community to perform a robotic minimally invasive endoscopic surgery. (Photo by Ricardo Reyes/Department of Defense)

When you meet Dr. Candice Jones-Cox, director of the Women's Health Services at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, you will learn that she's a fierce patient advocate and a meticulous surgeon, passionately learning cutting-edge techniques to adapt to an ever-changing medical landscape. She's an obstetrician-gynecologist, highly adept at ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: July 11, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery