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Diagnostic Intervals in Breast, Colorectal, Lung, Pancreatic, Oesophageal and Gastric Cancers 2001-02 and 2007-08: Database Study Richard D NealBangor.

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Presentation on theme: "Diagnostic Intervals in Breast, Colorectal, Lung, Pancreatic, Oesophageal and Gastric Cancers 2001-02 and 2007-08: Database Study Richard D NealBangor."— Presentation transcript:

1 Diagnostic Intervals in Breast, Colorectal, Lung, Pancreatic, Oesophageal and Gastric Cancers 2001-02 and 2007-08: Database Study Richard D NealBangor University Nafees U Din Bangor University William Hamilton Peninsula Medical School Greg RubinDurham University

2  Shorter ‘diagnostic intervals’ (the time period between the first presentation of potential cancer symptoms, usually to primary care, and diagnosis) may lead to earlier stage diagnoses and better cancer outcomes.  As part of the National Awareness and Early Diagnosis Initiative (NAEDI), we undertook this baseline study.  The General Practice Research Database (GPRD) in the UK is a well-validated dataset for research in primary care. Background

3 Diagnostic interval Onset of symptoms Presentation of symptoms Date of diagnosis Time Diagnostic interval

4  To determine and compare diagnostic intervals in two time periods (2001-02 & 2007-08 - before and after the introduction of the 2005 NICE Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer)  To create baselines for future comparisons. Aims

5 Patient cohorts Symptomatic patients of incident cancer aged ≥ 40 diagnosed between:  01.01.01 – 31.12.02 inclusive (breast n= 733, colorectal n= 1825, lung n= 1671, pancreas n= 409, oesophagus n=555, stomach n=415)  01.01.07 – 31.12.08 inclusive (breast n= 902, colorectal n= 2716, lung n= 2567, pancreas 524, oesophagus n=761, stomach n=562) Patients who did not present with symptoms (e.g. emergency admissions) were excluded. Methods

6 Symptoms: of primary local and regional disease for each cancer, and with a published independent association with cancer of greater than 0.5% for a patient presenting to primary care, based upon:  Systematic review evidence  Single studies using rigorous methods  Consensus statements  Additionally for each cancer: anaemia, anorexia, fatigue, and weight loss  Each symptom then classified into whether ‘NICE qualifying’ or not, based upon whether it justified urgent referral Methods

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8 Diagnostic interval: The duration in days from first presentation of cancer related symptom(s) in primary care to date of diagnosis. Data analysis: Diagnostic intervals in the two cohorts were compared and are presented here for: First symptomatic presentation NICE qualifying symptoms, divided into three groups : 1.Initial presentation of a NICE qualifying symptom (‘always NICE’) 2.Initial presentation of a NICE non-qualifying symptom, followed by a NICE qualifying symptom prior to diagnosis (‘became NICE’) 3.No NICE qualifying symptoms prior to diagnosis (‘never NICE’) Methods

9 Median diagnostic intervals reduced for all six cancers between 2001-02 & 2007-08:  8% (2 days) for breast  25% (21 days) for colorectal  3% (4 days) for lung  18% (11 days) for pancreatic  19% (11 days) for oesophageal  12% (11 days) for gastric This difference was statistically significant for colorectal, pancreatic and oesophageal cancers. First presentation of any cancer symptom

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11 Both cohorts had long diagnostic intervals towards the third and fourth quartiles. 90 th centile diagnostic intervals

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13 Overlaid histograms Breast Colorectal Date of diagnosis

14 Diagnostic intervals by NICE categories

15  Diagnostic intervals can and do change over time. These reduced for all cancers, but significantly for only colorectal, pancreas and oesophagus; but they still remain high with long tails to the distribution.  The reduction shifted patients from 3-4 months to 1-2 months.  There is significant room for improvement in reducing diagnostic intervals, especially for tails of distributions and for NICE non-qualifying symptoms.  The reduction in diagnostic intervals looks to be partly as a result of a major policy initiative; that of implementation of the 2005 Referral Guidelines for Suspected Cancer.  Analysis of symptoms by NICE urgent referral qualifying criteria shows that the guidelines may have made easier diagnosis quicker; and diagnostic intervals for ‘non-red flag’ symptoms remain high or have increased for some cancers.  Data on other cancers to follow.  The effect of reduction in diagnostic intervals on stage at diagnosis and survival remains unknown at present – but we are addressing this… Conclusions


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