193 Evaluation of the ‘One-Stop Diagnostic Head and Neck Lump Clinic' At A Tertiary Head and Neck Centre
Author(s) -
Amarkumar Dhirajlal Rajgor,
S Sood,
James O’Hara
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
british journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.202
H-Index - 201
eISSN - 1365-2168
pISSN - 0007-1323
DOI - 10.1093/bjs/znab259.015
Subject(s) - medicine , triage , head and neck cancer , head and neck , audit , newcastle upon tyne , surgery , general surgery , emergency medicine , radiation therapy , ancient history , management , economics , history
An urgent neck lump service was introduced at the Freeman Hospital (Newcastle-Upon-Tyne) in 2017. All 2-week-wait urgent head and neck referrals were triaged into this service. The clinic involves clinical examination by a head and neck specialist and if appropriate an urgent ultrasound scan (USS) in clinic +/- a fine needle aspiration for cytology (FNAC). This centralised system means patients can be diagnosed earlier and thus receive treatment swiftly. This audit aimed to primarily identify: The prevalence/pick-up rate of cancer diagnosed through the clinic The utilisation of USS/FNAC The time-to-treatment initiation Data was collated retrospectively through the electronic record system. The initial evaluation was conducted between June-November 2018 (n = 191). The subsequent re-evaluation was performed between September-November 2019 (n = 159), following increased clinic capacity, implementation of methods to increase awareness and a formal triage process. In the initial evaluation over 6 months (n = 191), 9.9% underwent an USS in the clinic and 9.95% at a later date. 18% of patients underwent a FNAC. 6.8% patients were diagnosed with cancer. The mean time-to-treatment initiation was 36 days. In the re-evaluation over 3 months (n = 159), 23.2% had an USS in the clinic and 30.2% at a later date. 13% of patients underwent a FNAC. 9.4% of patients were diagnosed with cancer. The mean time-to-treatment initiation was 44 days. This affirms the benefits of a swift ‘one-stop clinic’. On average, patients diagnosed with cancer had treatment initiation 40-days post-review. Furthermore, even with a triage process only 1 in 10 patients had cancer.
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