Hi, I'm a new member with a specific question. I have a range of heart issues, an implanted defibrillator, heart medication including Edoxaban anticoagulant, atorvastatin and bisoprolol. I have also had my gallbladder removed. Last week I tested positive on the bowel screening test (England) and have been called in for pre colonoscopy chat in 10 days with an advisory note a colonoscopy will be done subject to the 'chat' within a further two weeks.I have a further complication in that this has come just as I am about to move home with a moving date around 22 November.
Any advice based on recent experience please?
As an aside I note the very limited research around the use of antiplatelet and anticoagulant medication on the test outcome results with one small Norway study saying it does throw up different probabilities. However, if advised to have the colonoscopy I will likely take that advice.
As a further aside my wife is a bowel cancer survivor so I have some knowledge of bowel cancer. When I knew nothing I asked the Consultant surgeon for my wife whether there was any likelihood because of lifestyle that I could also get bowel cancer. He responded, 'a million to one, no.' I hope he's right! The screening leaflet suggests 1/10.
I like asides so here's another one, all the health issues I have had have been symptomless before the event and this is no different.
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Chinkoflight
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Thanks for posting with us. So, the positive test was blood in the stool. It’s always critical to find the reason. I am on Xarelto blood thinners and get an annual colonoscopy. I just stop Xarelto 2 days prior to the procedure and go right back on it after the procedure. I have never had any issues with doing that. I am 62. I’ve never been advised to not do this becayse I'm on blood thinners. I have a hereditary cancer called Lynch Syndrome. The annual colonoscopy is part of my surveillance.
It is awesome that your wife is a bowel cancer survivor. If you are worried about getting cancer, your wife must not be hereditary, and her cause was somatic. If there is no family history in your family, then you’re in the mainstream pool of probability. Lifestyle and environment can play a role. Gut health is always a contributor.
Also, are you symptomless if you tested positive on a bowel screening test? Why did you get the test? It is possible to test positive and not see any symptoms. Usually there is some indicator / metric ignored. I had some symptoms that I didn’t realize were symptoms. The colonoscopy is the gold standard to finding polyps and GI tract issues. 👍
I do wish you the best. Please keep us up to speed on what you find out and how the “pre colonoscopy chat” goes.
Thank you
Tom, GCCA Survivor - Colon Cancer Connected Site Administrator.
Hi and thanks for the very helpful reply. The various 'blood thinners' have not been tested for their impact on GI bleeding, but a Norwegian study looked at positive FIT test outcome variations for people on heart/blood medications and found lower levels of cancer and adenomas in their test sample group . That's not to say the medications were generating false positives in the FIT test. More research needed.I had my gallbladder removed and it's possible that some symptoms I put down to this can be ticked off for cancer too, but I'm not getting ahead of myself.
My wife was very lucky to have access to a consultant who had just relocated from an eminent research team. She collapsed with advanced stage 3 that had got into adjacent lymph nodes. So to be here 11 years in is testament to the care.
I think my pre procedure discussion will be interesting. I'm picking up that the risk aversion of the practitioners sometimes dictates the procedure, with some teams suggesting that the ICD should be switched off as well as desisting from meds. Whilst others only require to stop Edoxaban on the day of procedure because of its short half life!
A positive FIT could be the result of many different things besides cancer. Blood in the stool needs a definitive answer either by physical exam, colonoscopy or endoscopy. Not sure if blood thinners would only be affecting the colon or preventing cancer if it were playing a role in the FIT test. But, I hope it is doing that as I’m on Xarelto for life.
I’m glad your wife had good care. 11 years is a great mile marker. I certainly had good care as well. I’m 12 years from diagnosis and 7 years NED. I do see cancer patients dealing bad diagnoses and slow responding health systems. Where you live shouldn’t decide if you can survive a cancer diagnosis. There’s a lot of work to do in that area.👍
Hi, my appointment outcome was 1 to stop anticoagulant three days before the procedure
2 a cardiologist/EP will be present and the ICD will be switched off during the procedure
3 reduced choice of appointment because of the above.
4 everything else standard, I declined the option for an intravenous sedative.
I was surprised to be told that if anything serious is found ie cancer, I will be kept in for further investigations on the day. This wasn't in any advisory leaflets.
I am in the Eastern area and could not get an appointment within the 14 days at my local hospital, so took the first available appointment in 12 days at the nearest alternative hospital.
hi I I hope you’re doing well I had bleeding and fit test came back 400 I was so scared I had colonoscopy which was painless totally painless and thank god if there is one it was colitis still not great but better than you know what. All the best hope this helps love from here x
Thanks for the reply. I've had a journey where I keep ending up in the unusual, exceptional box. I've ridden this in as upbeat a way as possible, and managed to keep hold of my generally good health. I get the ' gosh you wouldn't know by looking at you..' comments. But this latest, bang on time curveball, to be added to the pot has strangely hit me hard and I've been catastrophising the possible outcomes. I do know the realities and hopefully I will feel a little more balanced within the next three weeks. And as I write the radio has just used bowel cancer screening as an example of gloom! My response is to laugh not cry, so I think my initial panic is waning. I hope you're journey is positive. Take care.
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