Key Points
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The diagnosis of cancer as an emergency is associated with a substantially worse prognosis; however, this represents an understudied problem, with evidence examining its frequency and aetiology limited to a few developed countries
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Most available evidence defines diagnosis of cancer as an emergency contextually instead of employing clinical criteria regarding presentation severity, and uses administrative data as opposed to reviews of medical records
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An emergency diagnosis of cancer often has a complex aetiology, involving tumour, patient and health-care related factors; evidence on the role of tumour and health-care related factors is particularly sparse
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Studying variations in the risk of emergency presentations by prior health-care use and related symptoms can elucidate how some emergency presentations could potentially be prevented
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Sociodemographic inequalities in the risks of emergency presentation underline the contribution of psychosocial factors and the potential for targeting of public health campaigns regarding cancer symptoms
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Optimising screening can help to reduce emergency presentations of patients with colorectal cancer
Abstract
Many patients with cancer are diagnosed through an emergency presentation, which is associated with inferior clinical and patient-reported outcomes compared with those of patients who are diagnosed electively or through screening. Reducing the proportion of patients with cancer who are diagnosed as emergencies is, therefore, desirable; however, the optimal means of achieving this aim are uncertain owing to the involvement of different tumour, patient and health-care factors, often in combination. Most relevant evidence relates to patients with colorectal or lung cancer in a few economically developed countries, and defines emergency presentations contextually (that is, whether patients presented to emergency health-care services and/or received emergency treatment shortly before their diagnosis) as opposed to clinically (whether patients presented with life-threatening manifestations of their cancer). Consistent inequalities in the risk of emergency presentations by patient characteristics and cancer type have been described, but limited evidence is available on whether, and how, such presentations can be prevented. Evidence on patients' symptoms and health-care use before presentation as an emergency is sparse. In this Review, we describe the extent, causes and implications of a diagnosis of cancer following an emergency presentation, and provide recommendations for public health and health-care interventions, and research efforts aimed at addressing this under-researched aspect of cancer diagnosis.
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Change history
19 October 2016
An incorrect version of the supplementary information was originally published with this Review. The originally published supplementary information has now been replaced with the correct version of this information.
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Acknowledgements
Y. Z. acknowledges an Academic Clinical Fellowship in General Practice funded by Health Education East of England. F.M.W. acknowledges funding from a UK National Institute for Health Research Clinician Scientist award. G.L. acknowledges funding from Cancer Research UK (Advanced Clinican Scientist Fellowship Award, grant number A18180).
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G.L. and Y.Z. researched data for this article and wrote the manuscript. All authors made substantial contributions to discussions of content, and reviewed and/or edited the manuscript before submission.
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Supplementary information
Supplementary information S1 (table 1)
Frequency of emergency presentation for different cancers (PDF 205 kb)
Supplementary information S2 (table 2)
Descriptions of included studies / sources of evidence (PDF 180 kb)
Supplementary information S3 (table 3)
Population based studies on EP and types of variables considered/mentioned by each (PDF 182 kb)
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Zhou, Y., Abel, G., Hamilton, W. et al. Diagnosis of cancer as an emergency: a critical review of current evidence. Nat Rev Clin Oncol 14, 45–56 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/nrclinonc.2016.155
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nrclinonc.2016.155
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