
- IAGES
- ASI — Association of Surgeons of India
- SAGES
- International surgical societies
Quick answer
AI & snippet readyColon cancer screening — usually a colonoscopy — finds and removes pre-cancerous polyps before they ever turn into cancer, making it one of the few tests that prevents cancer rather than just detecting it. People at average risk should start around age 45–50, and earlier if there are symptoms (bleeding, a change in bowel habit, unexplained anaemia) or a family history. The test is done under sedation, is essentially painless, and takes about 20–30 minutes.
Key takeaways
Screening removes polyps before they become cancer — prevention, not just detection
Average-risk screening usually starts at age 45–50
Start earlier with symptoms or a family history of colon cancer
Colonoscopy is painless, done under sedation, and takes ~20–30 minutes
Never dismiss rectal bleeding as just piles
How does colon cancer screening actually prevent cancer?
Most colon cancers grow slowly from small, harmless-looking growths called polyps over 10–15 years. A screening colonoscopy finds and removes those polyps before they ever turn into cancer — which makes it one of the very few tests in medicine that prevents a disease rather than merely catching it early.
Think of a polyp as a tiny wart on the inner lining of the colon. Most never become dangerous, but a certain type — the adenoma — can slowly change into cancer over many years. Because that change is slow and silent, there is a long window in which the polyp can simply be snipped out.
This is the crucial difference between colon cancer and many other cancers. With screening, we are not waiting to find an early tumour — we are removing the seed before it ever grows into one. That is why screened populations have far lower rates of the disease.
Colorectal cancer is one of the most preventable serious cancers — yet it remains common, largely because so many eligible people never get screened.
Who should be screened for colon cancer, and when?
People at average risk should begin screening around age 45–50. You should be assessed earlier — at any age — if you have warning symptoms such as a change in bowel habit, rectal bleeding or unexplained anaemia, or if you have a family history of colon cancer or polyps, which brings the start age forward.
Who is at higher-than-average risk
- A parent, sibling or child who had colon cancer or advanced polyps
- A personal history of polyps or inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's or ulcerative colitis)
- Certain inherited syndromes (such as Lynch syndrome or FAP)
- Long-standing symptoms — bleeding, altered bowel habit, unexplained anaemia or weight loss
If a close relative was diagnosed with colon cancer, a common rule is to start screening about ten years before the age they were diagnosed, or by 40 — whichever comes first. Your doctor will tailor this to your exact family history.
Symptoms change everything. Screening guidelines are for people who feel well. If you have bleeding or a change in bowel habit, that is not screening — it is investigation, and it should happen now, regardless of age.
What actually happens during a colonoscopy?
After a bowel-cleansing preparation the night before, the test itself is done under sedation and takes about 20–30 minutes. It is essentially painless — most people remember nothing — and any polyps found are usually removed in the same sitting, so screening and treatment happen together.
Step by step, start to finish
- Preparation: a special drink the evening before empties the colon so the lining can be seen clearly.
- Sedation: you are given medication so you are relaxed and comfortable throughout.
- The examination: a thin, flexible camera gently inspects the entire colon lining.
- Polyp removal: any polyps found are painlessly removed and sent to the lab.
- Recovery: you rest for an hour as the sedation wears off, then go home the same day.
The bowel preparation is the part most people dread, but it is the part that makes the test work — a clean colon means nothing is missed. Modern split-dose preparations are much easier to take than the older versions.
You will need someone to take you home afterwards because of the sedation, but most people are back to normal eating that evening and back to work the next day.
Is rectal bleeding always caused by piles?
No — and this is the single most dangerous assumption in bowel health. Bright-red bleeding is very often from piles, but the exact same symptom can be the first sign of colon or rectal cancer. The only way to be sure is a proper assessment, including a colonoscopy where appropriate.
Countless advanced cancers begin with bleeding that was blamed on piles for months or years. Piles and cancer can even exist together — so finding one does not rule out the other.
This does not mean every episode of bleeding is sinister; most is not. It means bleeding deserves a look rather than an assumption — particularly after age 45, or alongside a change in bowel habit, weight loss or tiredness from anaemia.
If you take one thing from this article: never let rectal bleeding be dismissed without examination. It is a 30-minute test versus a missed cancer.
How often do you need screening, and what about home stool tests?
If your colonoscopy is completely normal, repeat screening is often advised about every ten years; the interval is shorter if polyps are found or you are higher risk. Home stool tests (FIT) are a reasonable alternative for average-risk people who cannot have colonoscopy — but a positive result must always be followed by a colonoscopy.
Colonoscopy is the gold standard because it both detects and treats in one sitting. Stool-based tests are easier and non-invasive, but they only flag a possible problem — they cannot remove a polyp, so an abnormal result still leads to colonoscopy.
- Normal colonoscopy, average risk: usually repeat in ~10 years
- Small polyps removed: often repeat in 5–7 years
- Multiple or larger polyps: shorter interval, individualised
- FIT stool test: yearly, but any positive needs a colonoscopy
When to start colon cancer screening
| Risk group | When to start screening |
|---|---|
| Average risk, no symptoms | Around age 45–50 |
| Family history of colon cancer or polyps | Often ~10 years before the relative’s age at diagnosis |
| Symptoms (bleeding, bowel-habit change, anaemia) | Assess now, at any age |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | Earlier and more frequent screening |
How we get you better — step by step
Myths vs facts
A colonoscopy is painful
It is done under sedation and is essentially painless.
No symptoms means no risk
Early colon cancer and polyps usually cause no symptoms at all.
Rectal bleeding is always piles
The same symptom can be the first sign of colon or rectal cancer.
Screening is only for the elderly
Average-risk screening now begins around age 45.
Related treatments & services
Frequently asked questions
No. It is performed under sedation and is essentially painless, with most people recovering within an hour.
If your colonoscopy is normal, repeat screening is often advised about every ten years, but the interval is shorter if polyps are found or you are higher risk.
References & sources
- US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) — Colorectal Cancer Screening, 2021
- American Cancer Society — Colorectal Cancer Screening Guideline
- NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines — Colorectal Cancer Screening
Guidance is based on peer-reviewed evidence and international clinical guidelines, interpreted by Dr. Avinash Tank.


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