Algorithm study 90% accurate forecast intestine cancer

According to research, a new method to detect intestinal cancer is more than 90% accurate in predicting that high risk people will develop the disease.
About 500,000 people in the UK live with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn and ulcerative colitis.
Currently, they are offered regular check-ups for the development of pre-cancer in their intestine, which if detected, indicates a 30% possibility of bowel cancer of more than 10 years.
But the UK research found that DNA changes in those pre-cancer cells, when analyzed by an algorithm, were more than 90% accurate in estimating who would develop bowel cancer over the next five years.
Researchers used tissue samples from IBD patients â but it is expected that their method can be used to develop a simple blood test to identify those IBD patients at the most risk.

Waterloville, Craig Foster from Hunts, âwill save life from such research,â Hunts, Hunts, Craig Foster said in February 2024.
Farba was 18 years old, when she was 18 years old, she lived with ulcerative colitis when her three-fourth part of her bowel was removed.
Craig said, âIt gives me a comfort to know that there are scientists working right now so that no one can experience the same situation that was in Fariba.â
âSix months after the diagnosis, Farba died.
âEven though it was a short time, it was the worst time.
âCancer does not take a prisoner â and no matter who you are or with whom, everyone is affected in some way,â

Traver Graham, professor at the Institute of Cancer Research in London, said: âMost people with ulcerative colitis or Crohnâs disease will not develop bowel cancer.
âBut for those who have these conditions and are indicating pre-cancer in their colon, some are for making difficult decisions.
âEither they have monitored it regularly, in the hope that it does not become cancer, or they have been removed to guarantee their bowel that they do not get cancer in the future.
âNone of these options is particularly pleasant.
âOur tests and algorithms give people with IBD, and the doctors who take care of them, the best possible information so that they can take the right decisions about how to manage the risk of their cancer.â
âVery excitingâ
âFocus Resourcesâ
Cancer Research UK Dr. Ian Fallks, who funded research, says progress in technology is reopening the understanding of diseases such as cancer.
âGenome sequencing is now more cheap and more wider than ever â and it is changing how we see cancer,â he said.
âGetting full readouts of tumor DNA means that we can see a large picture of someoneâs onset and how it is likely to change over time.
âWith this research, we can focus on resources on the treatment of people with IBDs that are actually at high risk, saving valuable time and money to health services.
âWe can also give those people at least risk peace and remove the fear of bowel cancer in the future.â