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. 2013 Jan;63(606):e1-10.
doi: 10.3399/bjgp13X660724.

Symptoms and risk factors to identify men with suspected cancer in primary care: derivation and validation of an algorithm

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Symptoms and risk factors to identify men with suspected cancer in primary care: derivation and validation of an algorithm

Julia Hippisley-Cox et al. Br J Gen Pract. 2013 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Early diagnosis of cancer could improve survival so better tools are needed.

Aim: To derive an algorithm to estimate absolute risks of different types of cancer in men incorporating multiple symptoms and risk factors.

Design and setting: Cohort study using data from 452 UK QResearch® general practices for development and 224 for validation.

Method: Included patients were males aged 25-89 years. The primary outcome was incident diagnosis of cancer over the next 2 years (lung, colorectal, gastro-oesophageal, pancreatic, renal, blood, prostate, testicular, other cancer). Factors examined were: 'red flag' symptoms such as weight loss, abdominal distension, abdominal pain, indigestion, dysphagia, abnormal bleeding, lumps; general symptoms such as tiredness, constipation; and risk factors including age, family history, smoking, alcohol intake, deprivation score and medical conditions. Multinomial logistic regression was used to develop a risk equation to predict cancer type. Performance was tested on a separate validation cohort.

Results: There were 22 521 cancers from 1 263 071 males in the derivation cohort. The final model included risk factors (age, BMI, chronic pancreatitis, COPD, diabetes, family history, alcohol, smoking, deprivation); 22 symptoms, anaemia and venous thrombo-embolism. The model was well calibrated with good discrimination. The receiver operator curve statistics values were: lung (0.92), colorectal (0.92), gastro-oesophageal (0.93), pancreas (0.89), renal (0.94), prostate (0.90) blood (0.83, testis (0.82); other cancers (0.86). The 10% of males with the highest risks contained 59% of all cancers diagnosed over 2 years.

Conclusion: The algorithm has good discrimination and could be used to identify those at highest risk of cancer to facilitate more timely referral and investigation.

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