The best screening test is the one that gets followed up on

Gastroenterology

Peer-Reviewed
Editorial arguing that adherence to follow-up care is the critical determinant of colorectal cancer screening effectiveness, with implications for screening program design. Published in Gastroenterology.
Authors

van den Berg, D.M.N.

Brück, C.C.

Nascimento de Lima, P.

Alarid-Escudero, F.

Hahn, A.I.

Lansdorp-Vogelaar, I.

Colorectal Working Group of CISNET [incl. Roa, J.]

Published

February 23, 2026

Doi

Journal cover — Gastroenterology

The Best Screening Test is the One That Gets Followed-up on

Gastroenterology

February 2026 DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2026.02.013

van den Berg, D.M.N., Brück, C.C., Nascimento de Lima, P., Alarid-Escudero, F., Hahn, A.I., Lansdorp-Vogelaar, I., & Colorectal Working Group of CISNET [incl. Roa, J.]

Caravaggio — The Incredulity of Saint Thomas (1601) Sanssouci Picture Gallery · Potsdam Thomas presses his finger into the wound to verify what he doubts — not out of defiance, but out of the need to know. A meditation on empirical conviction: belief deferred until the evidence is personally confirmed.

The Problem

Colorectal cancer screening saves lives – but only when the process is completed. The well-known saying by Dr. Sidney Winawer, “the best test is the test that gets done and done well,” has driven campaigns to boost screening uptake. Yet a critical gap persists: nearly half of patients with a positive stool-based test never complete the follow-up colonoscopy. Without that diagnostic step, screening delivers zero benefit – and patients bear only the costs and harms.

The Approach

Using the MISCAN-Colon microsimulation model, we simulated 10 million individuals offered a one-time FIT screening at age 45. We systematically varied both screening adherence and follow-up colonoscopy adherence across five levels (0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%) to quantify how each step of the pipeline contributes to life years gained. We complemented the modeling exercise with a comprehensive review of clinical evidence and system-level barriers.

What We Found

44%
Patients lost to follow-up after positive stool test
Higher CRC death risk without timely follow-up
0%
Benefit with zero follow-up – regardless of screening uptake

The simulation demonstrated that follow-up adherence is at least as important as screening adherence. Scenarios with 0% follow-up yielded no life years gained compared to no screening at all – even with 100% screening uptake. Remarkably, 25% screening with 75% follow-up produced similar benefits to 75% screening with 25% follow-up. In safety-net health systems, where follow-up rates fall below 45%, even blood-based screening tests were not cost-effective compared to no screening.

Life years gained per 1,000 screened at age 45 (FIT versus no screening) across adherence levels Life years gained per 1,000 screened at age 45 (FIT vs no screening), across screening and follow-up adherence levels.

Why It Matters

The CRC screening pipeline is leaking. Without timely follow-up colonoscopies, even perfect screening uptake and high-quality tests deliver no benefit. System-level interventions – patient navigation, reminder systems, care coordination, and rideshare programs – are essential to close the gap. As NCQA develops new HEDIS measures for follow-up adherence, the message must shift: screening is complete only when appropriate follow-up is provided.

Citation

van den Berg, D.M.N., Brück, C.C., Nascimento de Lima, P., Alarid-Escudero, F., Hahn, A.I., Lansdorp-Vogelaar, I., & Colorectal Working Group of the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET) [incl. Roa, J.]. (2026). The best screening test is the one that gets followed up on. Gastroenterology. DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2026.02.013

Citation

BibTeX citation:
@article{den_berg,_d.m.n.2026,
  author = {den Berg, D.M.N., van and C.C. , Brück and de Lima, P.,
    Nascimento and F. , Alarid-Escudero and A.I. , Hahn and I. ,
    Lansdorp-Vogelaar and Working Group of CISNET {[}incl. Roa, J.{]},
    Colorectal},
  title = {The Best Screening Test Is the One That Gets Followed up On},
  journal = {Gastroenterology},
  date = {2026-02-23},
  url = {https://jorgeroac.com/publications/papers/peer-reviewed/gastro-screening-followup/},
  doi = {10.1053/j.gastro.2026.02.013},
  langid = {en}
}
For attribution, please cite this work as:
Berg, D.M.N., van den, Brück C.C., Nascimento de Lima, P., et al. 2026. “The Best Screening Test Is the One That Gets Followed up On.” Gastroenterology, accepted, February 23. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2026.02.013.