
Available online 7 November 2025
Author links open overlay panel, , , , , , , , AbstractBackground and study aimsPatients diagnosed with colon cancer after a bleeding episode are often receiving antithrombotic therapy (AT), indicating a potential link between AT and the timing of diagnosis. Our study aims to investigate the possibility that the administration of AT contributes, through the early onset of symptoms, to the early diagnosis of colon cancer.
Patients and methodsPatients being treated for colon cancer were analyzed retrospectively. Patients diagnosed after screening colonoscopy or other screening modalities were omitted.
Results171 patients were included. Most patients were diagnosed with cancer stage III (66, 38.6 %) and II (47, 27.5 %). Fifty-five patients were receiving AT (32.2 %), while 54 (31.6) and 44 (25.7) patients presented with a bleeding event or anemia, respectively. A statistically significant association was observed between the use of AT and an earlier cancer stage at diagnosis (p = 0.002). 87.3 % of patients receiving AT were diagnosed with non-metastatic cancer, compared to 67.2 % of patients not receiving AT. Patients diagnosed after a bleeding episode or onset of anemia while receiving AT had an earlier stage of disease at diagnosis than the rest (p < 0.001), with 94.9 % of them being diagnosed with non-metastatic cancer, compared to 68.2 % of patients in other groups.
ConclusionsThe use of antithrombotic drugs may lead to an earlier diagnosis of colon cancer due to the earlier appearance of complications such as bleeding or anemia. Therefore, the appearance of bleeding in these patients, despite the initial morbidity, may turn out in the long term to be a critical event that allows early diagnosis and treatment.
KeywordsAnticoagulation
Antiplatelets
Colorectal cancer
Bleeding
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Pan-Arab Association of Gastroenterology.
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