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The nature and frequency of abdominal symptoms in cancer patients and their associations with time to help-seeking: evidence from a national audit of cancer diagnosis.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Koo, Minjoung Monica 
von Wagner, Christian 
Abel, Gary A 
McPhail, Sean 
Hamilton, William 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Raising awareness of possible cancer symptoms is important for timely help-seeking; recent campaigns have focused on symptom groups (such as abdominal symptoms) rather than individual alarm symptoms associated with particular cancer sites. The evidence base supporting such initiatives is still emerging however; understanding the frequency and nature of presenting abdominal symptoms among cancer patients could inform the design and evaluation of public health awareness campaigns. METHODS: We examined eight presenting abdominal symptoms (abdominal pain, change in bowel habit, bloating/distension, dyspepsia, rectal bleeding, dysphagia, reflux and nausea/vomiting) among 15 956 patients subsequently diagnosed with cancer in England. We investigated the cancer site case-mix and variation in the patient interval (symptom-onset-to-presentation) by abdominal symptom. RESULTS: Almost a quarter (23%) of cancer patients presented with abdominal symptoms before being diagnosed with one of 27 common and rarer cancers. The patient interval varied substantially by abdominal symptom: median (IQR) intervals ranged from 7 (0-28) days for abdominal pain to 30 (4-73) days for dysphagia. This variation persisted after adjusting for age, sex and ethnicity (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Abdominal symptoms are common at presentation among cancer patients, while time to presentation varies by symptom. The need for awareness campaigns may be greater for symptoms associated with longer intervals to help-seeking.

Description

Keywords

Abdominal Pain, Aged, Deglutition Disorders, Dyspepsia, Female, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage, Humans, Intestinal Diseases, Male, Middle Aged, Nausea, Neoplasms, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Time Factors, Vomiting

Journal Title

J Public Health (Oxf)

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1741-3842
1741-3850

Volume Title

40

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)