4.6 Article

Assessing how routes to diagnosis vary by the age of patients with cancer: a nationwide register-based cohort study in Denmark

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-022-09937-y

Keywords

Denmark; Neoplasm (MeSH); Cancer; Early Detection of Cancer (MeSH)

Categories

Funding

  1. VELUX FONDEN [00026334]
  2. Cancer Research UK [C18081/A18180]
  3. Cancer Research UK Population Research Catalyst award [C8640/A23385]

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This study found that there are variations in the routes to cancer diagnosis for different age groups. Middle-aged patients are more likely to be diagnosed through referral from primary care, while older patients are more likely to be diagnosed through unplanned admissions, death certificate only, and outpatient admissions.
Background Older patients with cancer have poorer prognosis compared to younger patients. Moreover, prognosis is related to how cancer is identified, and where in the healthcare system patients present, i.e. routes to diagnosis (RtD). We investigated whether RtD varied by patients' age. Methods This population-based national cohort study used Danish registry data. Patients were categorized into age groups and eight mutually exclusive RtD. We employed multinomial logistic regressions adjusted for sex, region, diagnosis year, cohabitation, education, income, immigration status and comorbidities. Screened and non-screened patients were analysed separately. Results The study included 137,876 patients. Both younger and older patients with cancer were less likely to get diagnosed after a cancer patient pathways referral from primary care physician compared to middle-aged patients. Older patients were more likely to get diagnosed via unplanned admission, death certificate only, and outpatient admission compared to younger patients. The patterns were similar across comorbidity levels. Conclusions RtD varied by age groups, and middle-aged patients were the most likely to get diagnosed after cancer patient pathways with referral from primary care. Emphasis should be put on raising clinicians' awareness of cancer being the underlying cause of symptoms in both younger patients and in older patients.

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