Literature DB >> 19344552

An audit of urology two-week wait referrals in a large teaching hospital in England.

Anup Mathew1, K M Desai.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Two week wait referral guidelines have been published by the UK Department of Health for suspected urological cancers. Concordance to these guidelines is variable. Our objectives were to assess the incidence of urological malignancy and the proportion of inappropriate referrals in the two-week wait pathway. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Retrospective audit of all two-week wait referrals to the urology department over 6 months. Inappropriate referrals were those not satisfying the referral criteria, but referred under the two-week wait system. Detection rates were calculated for each referral criterion based on diagnosis obtained from histology, imaging reports and clinic letters.
RESULTS: Incidence of cancer was 90 of 400 two-week wait referrals (23%). The cancer-detection rate based on reasons for referral ranged from 50 of 122 (41%) for elevated prostate-specific antigen levels to 2 of 56 (4%) for scrotal lumps; 42 (11%) referrals were inappropriate.
CONCLUSIONS: The overall cancer-detection rate is acceptable. Most inappropriate referrals were for long-standing symptoms and non-specific testicular/scrotal symptoms. The testicular cancer detection rate raises questions about the two-week wait guidelines. Providing general practitioners with fast-track scrotal ultrasound and revising the guideline may reduce the disproportionately high number of patients referred with suspected testicular cancer. Other inappropriate referrals are a cause for concern as they add to the workload of the 'urgent-referral' pathway.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19344552      PMCID: PMC2749401          DOI: 10.1308/003588409X391767

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann R Coll Surg Engl        ISSN: 0035-8843            Impact factor:   1.891


  3 in total

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3.  Has the breast cancer 'two week wait' guarantee for assessment made any difference?

Authors:  A R Khawaja; S M Allan
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  3 in total
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3.  Clinical outcome of head and neck cancer patients: a comparison between ENT patients referred via the 2 weeks wait pathway and alternative routes in the UK health system.

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Review 4.  Systematic review of clinical features of suspected prostate cancer in primary care.

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5.  Audit of rapid access introduction reveals high prevalence of prostate cancer in Western Region.

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6.  Risk profiles of prostate cancers identified from UK primary care using national referral guidelines.

Authors:  H Serag; S Banerjee; K Saeb-Parsy; S Irving; K Wright; S Stearn; A Doble; V J Gnanapragasam
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7.  Impact of investigations in general practice on timeliness of referral for patients subsequently diagnosed with cancer: analysis of national primary care audit data.

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  7 in total

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