NICE: Simple home test prevents thousands of unnecessary bowel cancer referrals
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A simple home test is sparing thousands of people from unnecessary
hospital investigations for bowel cancer, while helping them get
faster answers about whether they have the disease – with new data
showing the impact of NICE's recommendation to use the test. In
2024/25 there were 140,000 fewer referrals for suspected bowel
cancer than expected. The faecal immunochemical test (FIT) detects
small amounts of blood in poo, which can be a sign of bowel cancer.
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A simple home test is sparing thousands of people from
unnecessary hospital investigations for bowel cancer, while
helping them get faster answers about whether they have the
disease – with new data showing the impact of NICE's
recommendation to use the test. In 2024/25 there were 140,000
fewer referrals for suspected bowel cancer than expected.
The faecal immunochemical test (FIT) detects small amounts of
blood in poo, which can be a sign of bowel cancer. Bowel cancer
is the second biggest cancer killer in the UK, affecting the
large bowel including the colon and rectum. Most cases are
diagnosed in people over 50, but it can affect anyone.
Since the test was rolled out, urgent referrals for suspected
bowel cancer have declined. Yet the number of cancers detected
has remained stable, meaning the test is successfully identifying
patients who genuinely need urgent investigation and those who
can be safely reassured they do not have cancer. NHS England data
shared with NICE shows the test is making a real difference to
patient experience and reducing pressure on NHS services.
NICE guidance drives adoption
NICE issued guidance in 2023 recommending FIT for assessing
patients with symptoms of bowel cancer, building on earlier
guidance that recommended GPs offer the test to some categories
of people with relevant symptoms.
Since then, adoption has increased steadily. The proportion of
urgent referrals accompanied by a FIT result has risen from under
60% in June 2023 to almost 80% in June 2025.
Dr Kashif Siddiqui, a GP at St Georges Medical Practice
in Essex, said: "Almost all urgent referrals go with a
FIT result now, unless there is strong evidence that someone
needs to be referred right away.”
By doing this, patients can avoid unnecessary trips to hospital
for more investigations, making the system work better for
everyone.
Dr Baljit Singh, colorectal surgeon at University
Hospitals Leicester NHS Trust and committee member for NICE's FIT
guidance, said: "We have very high compliance – around
90% of primary care referrals in our area come with a FIT result.
There are always people who can't do a FIT test, maybe because of
frailty, learning difficulties, or other reasons."
Fewer unnecessary referrals, same cancer detection The introduction of FIT has helped GPs make more targeted referrals. Urgent primary care referrals for suspected bowel cancer have fallen over the past two financial years, even as referrals for all other cancers combined continue to rise.
Figure 1: Urgent referrals for suspected cancer in
England, by financial year Source: NHS England
Research published
last year analysed over 10,000 patient records from nine NHS
Trusts in the South West to evaluate the impact of FIT. It showed
that GPs widely adopted the test, leading to fewer colonoscopies
and waiting times returning to pre-pandemic levels.
Faster answers for patients
People are also getting faster answers about whether they have
bowel cancer. Faster diagnosis means patients can start treatment
sooner if they have cancer, or be reassured more quickly if they
don't.
The NHS lower gastrointestinal Faster Diagnosis Standard says
patients urgently referred for suspected cancer should find out
whether they have cancer within 28 days. As use of FIT has
increased, performance against this standard has improved
notably. The improvement is largely driven by people being ruled
out for cancer, as this group is larger than those diagnosed with
the disease.
Figure 2: Proportion of people meeting the 28-day Faster
Diagnosis Standard in England, by month
Note: 12-month rolling average of FDS performance. Data for Apr
to Aug 2025 is provisional. Source: NHS England.
The lower gastrointestinal Faster Diagnosis Standard has improved
by 14 percentage points since FIT was introduced, from 50% in
July 2022 to 64% in August 2025. For all other cancers combined,
the standard improved by just four percentage points in the same
period. But despite this progress, the lower gastrointestinal FDS
continues to lag behind other cancers.
Eric Power, interim director of the centre for
guidelines, said: "It is encouraging to see the
excellent adoption in primary care of this technology to avoid
unnecessary procedures, reduce patient anxiety, and make more
efficient use of NHS resources. "By using FIT, clinicians can more safely and quickly reassure people who are unlikely to have cancer and remove them from the NHS waiting list for a cancer referral. This is not only better for the patient, but frees up appointments for people who do have cancer to be seen faster, and that will improve their chances of a positive outcome following treatment.
"NICE is committed to keep focusing on what matters most to
support cancer pathways and deliver better outcomes for
patients." Dr Robert Logan, NHS England's national speciality adviser for endoscopy and bowel cancer screening, said: “NICE's endorsement of the use of FIT in patients with suspected bowel cancer has been a major driver in its rapid implementation and uptake across the NHS, thereby allowing those patients at greatest risk access to urgent investigation when most needed.” |
