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Timeliness of Presentation and Referral Among Cancer Patients Who Presented With Abdominal Symptoms: Evidence to Inform Symptom Awareness Campaigns
Author(s) -
Minjoung Monica Koo,
C von Wagner,
Gregory A. Abel,
Sean McPhail,
William Hamilton,
Gregory Rubin,
Georgios Lyratzopoulos
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of global oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.002
H-Index - 17
ISSN - 2378-9506
DOI - 10.1200/jgo.18.63100
Subject(s) - medicine , abdominal pain , cancer , bloating , population , referral , pediatrics , cohort , family medicine , environmental health
Background: Abdominal symptoms at presentation are common among patients subsequently diagnosed with cancer. While public health education campaigns in England and other countries have traditionally focused on 'red flag' symptoms associated with a single common cancer (e.g., 'blood in poo' and colorectal cancer), there is increasing interest in raising awareness of symptoms grouped by body area or system (eg 'abdominal symptoms'). Evidence regarding the frequency and nature of abdominal symptoms at presentation among a representative cancer patient cohort could inform the design and evaluation of community based cancer symptom awareness campaigns. Aim: To describe the frequency of abdominal symptoms at presentation among an incident cohort of cancer patients, examine variation in diagnostic timeliness and subsequently diagnosed cancer sites by abdominal symptom. Methods: The presenting symptom(s) of 15,956 cancer patients from a national audit of primary care records in England was coded into symptom categories. Eight abdominal symptoms with a range of predictive values and specificity for cancer were studied: abdominal pain, change in bowel habit, bloating/distension, dyspepsia, rectal bleeding, dysphagia, reflux, and nausea/vomiting. We investigated the prevalence of abdominal symptoms among the cancer patient population, examined variation in the length of the patient interval (time from symptom onset to presentation to primary care) and primary care interval (time from presentation to specialist referral) by symptom, and described the associated spectrum of diagnosed cancer sites for each individual symptom. Results: Almost a quarter (23%) of the incident cancer patient population had abdominal symptom(s) at presentation (n=3,661/15,956). The relative lengths of the patient and primary care intervals varied greatly by abdominal symptom. One in two cancer patients who had dysphagia before diagnosis presented 30 days after symptom onset (median (IQR) patient interval: 30 (10-61) days), but were referred immediately (median (IQR) primary care interval: 0 (0-14) days). In comparison, cancer patients who presented with abdominal pain had longer intervals postpresentation (median (IQR) patient interval: 7 (0-28) days, median (IQR) primary care interval: 16 (2-43) days). The majority (88.6%) of cancer patients who presented with an abdominal symptom were diagnosed with an abdominal or adjacent cancer, including colorectal, esophageal, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers. However, the remainder of patients were diagnosed with solid tumors of nonabdominal organ origin (7.6%) or a hematologic cancer (3.8%). Conclusion: Cancer symptom awareness campaigns focusing on abdominal symptoms could contribute to the earlier diagnosis of numerous common and rarer cancers. Evidence regarding the relative lengths of the patient and primary care intervals could be used as a measure of relative need for raising awareness.

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