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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07378930
NA

ULTRA-high-risk Surveillance to Avoid Future Events: the ULTRA-SAFE Trial

Sponsor: National Taiwan University Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The ULTRA-SAFE clinical trial is a prospective, randomized study designed to address the limitations of current "one-size-fits-all" colorectal cancer surveillance guidelines. While international standards recommend a three-year follow-up colonoscopy for all high-risk patients, data suggests that those with multiple advanced adenomas face a significantly higher recurrence risk (20%) compared to those with only low-risk adenomas (9%). To provide more personalized care, the trial compares a Standard Arm (colonoscopy at year three) against a FIT Arm, where participants undergo annual fecal immunochemical testing in years one and two. A positive FIT triggers an earlier colonoscopy, with the goal of reducing the 3-year prevalence of metachronous advanced colorectal neoplasms (meta-ACRN) from 20% to approximately 12.7%. The study has enrolled roughly 940 participants to statistically validate whether this early screening intervention can effectively prevent future malignant events in ultra-high-risk populations.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

40 Years - 75 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

940

Start Date

2026-03-01

Completion Date

2031-05-01

Last Updated

2026-01-30

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Early triage using Fecal immunochemical test

Fecal immunochemical test would be provided at first and second year after initial colonoscopy in FIT arm. Those with positive results would be arranged with early surveillance colonoscopy