Pathways to cancer care after a suspected cancer diagnosis in the emergency department: a survey of emergency physicians across Ontario.

IF 2.4 CJEM Pub Date : 2024-10-07 DOI:10.1007/s43678-024-00787-0
Keerat Grewal, Cameron Thompson, Howard Ovens, Rinku Sutradhar, David W Savage, Bjug Borgundvaag, Sheldon Cheskes, Kerstin de Wit, Antoine Eskander, Jonathan Irish, Jacqueline L Bender, Monika Krzyzanowska, Rohit Mohindra, Venkatesh Thiruganasambandamoorthy, Shelley L McLeod
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Abstract

Introduction: Little is known about how patients are managed after a suspected cancer diagnosis through the emergency department. The objective of this study was to examine the ED management, specifically referral practices, for ten suspected cancer diagnoses by emergency physicians across Ontario and to explore variability in management by cancer-type and centre.

Methods: An electronic survey was distributed to emergency physicians across Ontario, asking about referral practices for patients who could be discharged from the ED with one of ten suspected cancer diagnoses. Options for referral included: in-ED consult, outpatient medical or surgical specialists, surgical or medical oncology, and specialized cancer clinics. Data were described using frequencies and proportions. Variance partition coefficients were calculated to determine variation in responses attributed to differences between hospitals, with physicians nested within hospitals.

Results: 262 physicians from 54 EDs responded. Across most cancers, emergency physicians would refer to surgical specialists for further work-up; however, this ranged from 30.2% for lung cancer to 69.5% for head and neck cancer. For patients with an unknown primary malignancy, most physicians would refer to internal medicine clinic (34.3%) or obtain an in-ED consult (25.0%). Few physicians would refer directly to surgical or medical oncology from the ED. Comments suggest this may be due to oncologists requiring tissue confirmation of malignancy. Most referrals to specialized clinics were for suspected lung (30.2%) or breast cancer (19.5%); however, these appear to only be available at some centres. Variance in referrals between hospitals was lowest for breast cancer (variance partition coefficient = 8.6%) and highest for unknown primary malignancies (variance partition coefficient = 29.8%).

Interpretation: Physician management of new suspected cancer varies between EDs and is specific to cancer type. Strategies to standardize access to cancer care in a timely and equitable way for patients with newly suspected cancer in the ED are needed.

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急诊科诊断出疑似癌症后的癌症治疗途径:对安大略省急诊科医生的调查。
导言:人们对急诊科如何管理疑似癌症患者知之甚少。本研究的目的是检查安大略省急诊医生对十种疑似癌症诊断的急诊管理情况,特别是转诊做法,并探讨不同癌症类型和中心在管理方面的差异:我们向安大略省的急诊医生发放了一份电子调查问卷,询问他们对从急诊室出院的十种疑似癌症诊断之一的患者的转诊做法。转诊选择包括:急诊室会诊、内科或外科专家门诊、肿瘤外科或内科以及癌症专科诊所。数据使用频率和比例进行描述。通过计算方差分配系数来确定因医院之间的差异而导致的回复差异,并将医生嵌套在医院内。结果:54 家急诊室的 262 名医生做出了回复。在大多数癌症中,急诊医生都会将患者转诊至外科专家进行进一步检查;但这一比例从肺癌的 30.2% 到头颈部癌症的 69.5% 不等。对于原发恶性肿瘤不明的患者,大多数医生会转诊至内科诊所(34.3%)或获得急诊室内会诊(25.0%)。很少有医生会从急诊室直接转诊到肿瘤外科或肿瘤内科。评论认为,这可能是因为肿瘤学家需要组织确认恶性肿瘤。大多数转诊至专科门诊的患者都是疑似肺癌(30.2%)或乳腺癌(19.5%)患者;不过,似乎只有部分中心才有这些专科门诊。不同医院之间的转诊差异最小的是乳腺癌(差异分区系数=8.6%),最大的是未知原发性恶性肿瘤(差异分区系数=29.8%):解释:不同急诊室的医生对新疑似癌症的处理方式各不相同,且因癌症类型而异。有必要制定相关策略,及时、公平地规范急诊科新疑似癌症患者的癌症治疗。
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