Rapid diagnostic centres and early cancer diagnosis.
File(s)
Author(s)
Erridge, Simon
Lyratzopoulos, Georgios
Renzi, Cristina
Millar, Andrew
Lee, Richard
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Early cancer diagnosis is a clinical and research priority of the UK government. Earlier cancer diagnosis should enable identification of cancers at an earlier stage, leading to improved outcomes.1 This must be balanced with the potential physical and psychological harms of over-investigation and over-diagnosis.
The ‘two-week wait’ (2WW) referral pathway represents the most common route to cancer diagnosis. However, only 39% of cancer diagnoses were made via 2WW pathways in 2017, while significant proportions of diagnoses are made via other outpatient clinics (32%) or emergency presentation (19%), representing potentially missed diagnostic opportunities.2
Approximately 50% of cancer patients present with non-specific but concerning symptoms of cancer (NSCS).3 Compared to ‘alarm symptoms’ these have low predictive values for cancer and are less indicative of site-specific disease; consequently, they are not reflected in 2WW referral criteria.3 These patients frequently are referred later for specialist investigation and have more advanced disease.4 A principal goal for the new NHS Rapid Diagnostic Centres (RDCs) is to provide a pathway for patients with NSCS to detect cancer earlier, where treatment outcomes are more favourable.1 NHS England aims to provide full population coverage with RDCs by 2024.5
The ‘two-week wait’ (2WW) referral pathway represents the most common route to cancer diagnosis. However, only 39% of cancer diagnoses were made via 2WW pathways in 2017, while significant proportions of diagnoses are made via other outpatient clinics (32%) or emergency presentation (19%), representing potentially missed diagnostic opportunities.2
Approximately 50% of cancer patients present with non-specific but concerning symptoms of cancer (NSCS).3 Compared to ‘alarm symptoms’ these have low predictive values for cancer and are less indicative of site-specific disease; consequently, they are not reflected in 2WW referral criteria.3 These patients frequently are referred later for specialist investigation and have more advanced disease.4 A principal goal for the new NHS Rapid Diagnostic Centres (RDCs) is to provide a pathway for patients with NSCS to detect cancer earlier, where treatment outcomes are more favourable.1 NHS England aims to provide full population coverage with RDCs by 2024.5
Date Issued
2021-11
Date Acceptance
2021-11-01
Citation
British Journal of General Practice, 2021, 71 (712), pp.487-488
ISSN
0960-1643
Publisher
Royal College of General Practitioners
Start Page
487
End Page
488
Journal / Book Title
British Journal of General Practice
Volume
71
Issue
712
Copyright Statement
© British Journal of General Practice 2021 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
This article is Open Access: CC BY 4.0 licence
This article is Open Access: CC BY 4.0 licence
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34711557
PII: 71/712/487
Subjects
Early Detection of Cancer
Humans
Neoplasms
Reagent Kits, Diagnostic
Publication Status
Published online
Coverage Spatial
England