The Department of Health’s “two week standard” for bowel cancer: is it working?

Objective: To determine the effectiveness and efficiency of the Department of Health’s new general practitioner referral guidelines for bowel cancer. Design: One year prospective audit. Setting: District general hospital serving a population of 550 000. Subjects: All patients with bowel cancer; all...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gut 2004-03, Vol.53 (3), p.387-391
Hauptverfasser: Flashman, K, O’Leary, D P, Senapati, A, Thompson, M R
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: To determine the effectiveness and efficiency of the Department of Health’s new general practitioner referral guidelines for bowel cancer. Design: One year prospective audit. Setting: District general hospital serving a population of 550 000. Subjects: All patients with bowel cancer; all patients referred on the basis of the two week standard and to a routine colorectal surgical outpatient clinic. Main outcome measures: Proportion of cancers referred on the basis of the two week standard and to other colorectal clinics; the proportion with the higher risk criteria and their diagnostic yields; stage of cancers diagnosed in outpatient clinics; and time to treatment. Results: A total of 249 cancers were diagnosed in the index year. Sixty five (26.1%) were referred to two week standard clinics, 40 (16.1%) to routine colorectal surgical outpatient clinics, 54 (22%) to other clinics, and 88 (35.3%) were emergencies. Thirteen patients per week were referred to the two week standard clinics and 85% (54/65) of cancers so referred were seen within two weeks. The diagnostic yield of cancer in the two week standard clinic was 9.4% (65/695) compared with 2.2% (40/1815) in the routine colorectal surgical outpatient clinic (p
ISSN:0017-5749
1468-3288
1458-3288
DOI:10.1136/gut.2003.020503