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Patient non-attendance at urgent referral appointments for suspected cancer and its links to cancer diagnosis and one year mortality: A cohort study of patients referred on the Two Week Wait pathway
Affiliation:1. Department of Health Sciences, University of York, United Kingdom;2. Department of Health Sciences and the Hull York Medical School, University of York, United Kingdom;3. Cancer Research UK Clinical Cancer Centre in Leeds, United Kingdom;4. The Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust NHS Trust, United Kingdom;5. Patient and Public Involvement member, United Kingdom;6. Associate Medical Director NHS Leeds CCG, United Kingdom;7. Hull York Medical School, University of Hull, United Kingdom
Abstract:BackgroundThe ‘Two Week Wait’ policy aims to ensure patients with suspected cancer are seen within two weeks of referral. However, patient non-attendance can result in this target being missed. This study aimed to identify predictors of non-attendance; and analyse the relationship between attendance and outcomes including cancer diagnosis and early mortality.MethodsA cohort study of 109,433 adults registered at 105 general practices, referred to a cancer centre within a large NHS hospital trust (April 2009 to December 2016) on the ‘Two Week Wait’ pathway.Results5673 (5.2%) patients did not attend. Non-attendance was largely predicted by patient factors (younger and older age, male gender, greater deprivation, suspected cancer site, earlier year of referral, greater distance to the hospital) over practice factors (greater deprivation, lower Quality and Outcomes Framework score, lower cancer conversion rate, lower cancer detection rate). 10,360 (9.6%) patients were diagnosed with cancer within six months of referral (9.8% attending patients, 5.6% non-attending patients). Among these patients, 2029 (19.6%) died within 12 months of diagnosis: early mortality risk was 31.3% in non-attenders and 19.2% in attending patients.ConclusionsNon-attendance at urgent referral appointments for suspected cancer involves a minority of patients but happens in predictable groups. Cancer diagnosis was less likely in non-attending patients but these patients had worse early mortality outcomes than attending patients. The study findings have implications for cancer services and policy.
Keywords:Two week wait  Urgent referral  Cancer  Diagnosis  Early mortality  Non-attendance
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