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MVCN Primary Care Audit - Background. Evidence suggests that later diagnosis of cancer has been a major factor in the poorer survival rates in the UK compared with some other countries in Europe.
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MVCN Primary Care Audit -Background • Evidence suggests that later diagnosis of cancer has been a major factor in the poorer survival rates in the UK compared with some other countries in Europe. • CRS recommendation to look in detail at referrals of cancer cases to help identify delays & learning points. • RCGP & Durham university developed national audit template and are collating national results. • Retrospective case analysis of all new cancers diagnosed between Sept 2008 & March 2009, excluding screening detected cases and non-melanoma skin cancers. • LES established in Herts PCT to fund practices to take part.
comparisons • Where available I have compared with figures presented by the following networks • Greater Midlands cancer network • Anglia cancer network (interim results)
Results (1) • 31 of 141 practices (22%) took part(42.8%)(40%) • 521 cases (1530) (2381) • Average age 68 years (67)(46% (47%) women) • >90% white british (85%) • 7% housebound (6%) • 16.5% died within 18 months of diagnosis
Results (2) • Cancer types • Prostate 17.3% (17%) (17%) • Breast 16.5% (16%) (14.5%)(n.b screening cases excluded) • Colorectal 13.2% (15%) (13.8%) • Lung 9.6% (9%) (8%) • Bladder 4.8% (4%) (6%) • Lymphoma 4.4% (4%) (4%) • Melanoma 3.8% (4%) (7%) • Oesophageal 3.6% (4%) (2.5%)
Stage at diagnosis for the four most prevalent tumour sites MVCN
Stage at diagnosis for the four most prevalent tumour sites Greater Midlands CN
Avoidable delays • Comments have been collated & grouped • Patient factors (11%)– delay to present/choice/DNA/other health problems • Referral route/process (18%) (e.g. not 2ww when should have been) • Diagnostic difficulties, complex presentation (23%) • Test factors (12%)– misleading or ‘normal’ test results • Primary Care Doctor delay (13%) – missed diagnosis • Secondary Care delay (22%)– cross-specialty referrals, test delays, lost notes
Next steps • Detailed report prepared for sharing with national project, participating practices and board • To develop an education package for wide dissemination to practice teams to share learning points. Learning events, website. • Considering repeat audit. Targeted on specific tumour types.
Summary • Feedback from participating practices – positive, valuable learning process • Comparable in most areas to Greater Midlands & Anglia networks results • Less 2ww referrals, more private & routine • Longer pathways in Lung, Colorectal & prostate • Avoidable delays in approx. 20%. Learning points identified for dissemination • GPs feel that access to diagnostics is a significant factor in only 6.5% (8%)(4%) of cases