Clinical Meaning
Cancer screening aims to detect malignancy at an early, presymptomatic stage when treatment is more effective and survival is improved.
Cancer screening aims to detect malignancy at an early, presymptomatic stage when treatment is more effective and survival is improved. Effective screening requires a disease with a detectable preclinical phase, a test with adequate sensitivity and specificity, and evidence that early detection improves outcomes (not just lead-time bias). Cancer develops through a multi-step process of genetic mutations: oncogene activation (gain of function - RAS, MYC, HER2) and tumor suppressor gene inactivation (loss of function - p53, RB, APC, BRCA1/2). The adenoma-carcinoma sequence in colorectal cancer illustrates stepwise progression: normal epithelium → aberrant crypt foci → adenomatous polyp → dysplasia → invasive carcinoma over 10-15 years, providing a window for screening and polypectomy to interrupt cancer development. USPSTF grading: Grade A and B recommendations have sufficient evidence of net benefit and should be implemented as routine care. Grade C requires shared decision-making based on individual patient factors. Grade D recommendations have evidence of no benefit or net harm and should not be performed. Grade I indicates insufficient evidence to make a recommendation. Key screening metrics: sensitivity (proportion of diseased correctly identified...
