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YCN MSCC Pathway Implementation of NICE CG75 Level 1: Early warning. Dr Rob Turner Chair YCN MSCC Group Units to localise slides to clarify responsibilities of the MSCC Coordinator and specify points of referral from the initial triage to the MSCC Coordinator and then on to the AOL / AOT.
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YCN MSCC PathwayImplementation of NICE CG75Level 1: Early warning Dr Rob Turner Chair YCN MSCC Group Units to localise slides to clarify responsibilities of the MSCC Coordinator and specify points of referral from the initial triage to the MSCC Coordinator and then on to the AOL / AOT
YCN MSCC Competency for Initial Identification • The Local Cancer Unit Acute Oncology Team (AOT) take responsibility for the diagnosis and transfer of appropriate patients • Competency has been defined for the staff groups involved in the diagnosis, management and treatment of MSCC patients Staff involved in the initial identification of potential MSCC including A&E and Acute medical Unit staff Competency • Knowledge and understanding of which patient groups are at a higher risk of developing MSCC • Knowledge and Understanding of the signs and symptoms of MSCC • Understanding of the appropriate aspects of the MSCC pathway • Escalation process to the Local MSCC Coordinator Education E - Learning level 1- Early Warning
What is MSCC? • Malignant (metastatic) • Spinal • Cord • Compression Basically a complicated bony metastasis as a consequence of advancing malignancy
Mechanism • Predictable symptomatic course • Three phases of patho-physiology • Vertebral infiltration/expansion • Axonal compression • Vascular compromise (esp. mid thoracic) • Arterial • Venous • Influenced by • Vertebral anatomy (local & spinal) • Biomechanical compromise
MSCC: Symptomatic course • Bone pain • Radicular pain • Band-like/belt-like • Sciatica • Motor weakness • With preserved gait function • With paraplegia • With paralysis • Sensory loss • Autonomic dysfunction (loss of sphincters)
Goals of YCN MSCC Pathway • Patient education for early presentation • Diagnosis at an early phase of process • Treatment with greater success • Improved function and QoL E – Learning Training Packs on the YCN website Level 1- Early Warning Level 2 – Diagnostic Level 3 – Specialist Intervention
Patient Education • Predictable clinical course • Suitable for screening • Symptomatic patients • MRI imaging for those who need • Rapid access to diagnosis and treatment
Patient Education • Concerns • Bony metastases present in 30% cancer patients • Non-malignant back pain common in population • Generalised weakness common in advanced cancer • Solution • Identify high risk groups and target them • Improved specificity of screening • Reduced anxiety in patient population as a whole
High Risk Patient Groups • Any patient who has had prior MSCC • Any patient with known bony metastases at any site from any primary site • Known cancer awaiting investigation for suspicious spinal pain • Tumour site-specific recommendations • Prostate: Hormone resistant prostate cancer • Renal: Metastatic renal cell cancer • Lung: Any metastatic lung cancer • Breast: Any metastatic breast cancer • Myeloma: Any myeloma
High-risk patient groups • High-risk patients identified clinically • Face-to-face discussion • Provided with MSCC Early Warning Leaflet Features of MSCC • What to do if they are worried • How to access help • Via 24-hour SINGLE POINT CONTACT NUMBER • Insert local contact point
LTHT MSCC Early Warning Booklet – Substitute Local Version & Title
Overall goals • Earlier diagnosis and treatment • Outcomes linked to pre-treatment status • Faster access to diagnostic MRI • Suspected • MSCC within 24 hours • VBM within 7 days • Rapid escalation to definitive therapy • Proven • MSCC within 24 hours • VBM within 7 days • Definitive therapy case-appropriate • Co-ordinated case-appropriate rehabilitation
MSCC Pathway Components • Education and early warning • Triage • Diagnosis & generic care • Specialist intervention • Spinal surgery • Radiotherapy • Rehabilitation
Triage: Mechanism (Insert Local Process Below) • Nursing staff will take basic details • Escalate to on-call clinical oncology team • In hours to be handled immediately • Contact - Insert Local Information • Overnight (Local Number) • Escalate to resident/duty ward medical staff • Insert Local Procedure • Priority • Immediate or deferred? • Ward or clinic for clinical assessment • Is MRI required and how quickly?
Nursing Triage (Insert Local process) • Question & Answer data recording form • Patient & referrer details • LOCATION & CONTACT DETAILS • Patient symptoms/features • Advice/instruction as to what will happen next • Complete for ALL MSCC related calls • Hand-over to medical staff / MSCC Coordinator
Triage: Endpoints • MSCC possible – Refer to Local MSCC Co-ordinator • Urgent clinical assessment • Urgent in-patient MRI (within 24 hours) • Admission may be required • MSCC less likely but VBM possible • Prompt outpatient assessment • Prompt outpatient MRI (within 7 days)
Further information YCN Website EQMS YCN MSCC Lead (rob.turner@leedsth.nhs.uk)