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Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation): an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study

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Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation) : an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study. / McPhail, Sean; Swann, Ruth; Johnson, Shane A et al.

In: The Lancet Oncology, Vol. 23, No. 5, 05.2022, p. 587-600.

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

McPhail, S, Swann, R, Johnson, SA, Barclay, ME, Abd Elkader, H, Alvi, R, Barisic, A, Bucher, O, Clark, GRC, Creighton, N, Danckert, B, Denny, CA, Donnelly, DW, Dowden, JJ, Finn, N, Fox, CR, Fung, S, Gavin, AT, Gomez Navas, E, Habbous, S, Han, J, Huws, DW, Jackson, CGCA, Jensen, H, Kaposhi, B, Kumar, SE, Little, AL, Lu, S, McClure, CA, Møller, B, Musto, G, Nilssen, Y, Saint-Jacques, N, Sarker, S, Te Marvelde, L, Thomas, RS, Thomas, RJS, Thomson, CS, Woods, RR, Zhang, B, Lyratzopoulos, G & ICBP Module 9 Emergency Presentations Working Group 2022, 'Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation): an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study', The Lancet Oncology, vol. 23, no. 5, pp. 587-600. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9

APA

McPhail, S., Swann, R., Johnson, S. A., Barclay, M. E., Abd Elkader, H., Alvi, R., Barisic, A., Bucher, O., Clark, G. R. C., Creighton, N., Danckert, B., Denny, C. A., Donnelly, D. W., Dowden, J. J., Finn, N., Fox, C. R., Fung, S., Gavin, A. T., Gomez Navas, E., ... ICBP Module 9 Emergency Presentations Working Group (2022). Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation): an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study. The Lancet Oncology, 23(5), 587-600. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9

CBE

MLA

Vancouver

McPhail S, Swann R, Johnson SA, Barclay ME, Abd Elkader H, Alvi R et al. Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation): an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study. The Lancet Oncology. 2022 May;23(5):587-600. Epub 2022 Apr 6. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9

Author

Bibtex

@article{fbe2dc5538034e869e312598b3734f39,
title = "Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation): an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Greater understanding of international cancer survival differences is needed. We aimed to identify predictors and consequences of cancer diagnosis through emergency presentation in different international jurisdictions in six high-income countries.METHODS: Using a federated analysis model, in this cross-sectional population-based study, we analysed cancer registration and linked hospital admissions data from 14 jurisdictions in six countries (Australia, Canada, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway, and the UK), including patients with primary diagnosis of invasive oesophageal, stomach, colon, rectal, liver, pancreatic, lung, or ovarian cancer during study periods from Jan 1, 2012, to Dec 31, 2017. Data were collected on cancer site, age group, sex, year of diagnosis, and stage at diagnosis. Emergency presentation was defined as diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission. Using logistic regression, we examined variables associated with emergency presentation and associations between emergency presentation and short-term mortality. We meta-analysed estimates across jurisdictions and explored jurisdiction-level associations between cancer survival and the percentage of patients diagnosed as emergencies.FINDINGS: In 857 068 patients across 14 jurisdictions, considering all of the eight cancer sites together, the percentage of diagnoses through emergency presentation ranged from 24·0% (9165 of 38 212 patients) to 42·5% (12 238 of 28 794 patients). There was consistently large variation in the percentage of emergency presentations by cancer site across jurisdictions. Pancreatic cancer diagnoses had the highest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (46·1% [30 972 of 67 173 patients]), with the jurisdictional range being 34·1% (1083 of 3172 patients) to 60·4% (1317 of 2182 patients). Rectal cancer had the lowest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (12·1% [10 051 of 83 325 patients]), with a jurisdictional range of 9·1% (403 of 4438 patients) to 19·8% (643 of 3247 patients). Across the jurisdictions, older age (ie, 75-84 years and 85 years or older, compared with younger patients) and advanced stage at diagnosis compared with non-advanced stage were consistently associated with increased emergency presentation risk, with the percentage of emergency presentations being highest in the oldest age group (85 years or older) for 110 (98%) of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, and in the most advanced (distant spread) stage category for 98 (97%) of 101 jurisdiction-cancer site strata with available information. Across the jurisdictions, and despite heterogeneity in association size (I2=93%), emergency presenters consistently had substantially greater risk of 12-month mortality than non-emergency presenters (odds ratio >1·9 for 112 [100%] of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, with the minimum lower bound of the related 95% CIs being 1·26). There were negative associations between jurisdiction-level percentage of emergency presentations and jurisdiction-level 1-year survival for colon, stomach, lung, liver, pancreatic, and ovarian cancer, with a 10% increase in percentage of emergency presentations in a jurisdiction being associated with a decrease in 1-year net survival of between 2·5% (95% CI 0·28-4·7) and 7·0% (1·2-13·0).INTERPRETATION: Internationally, notable proportions of patients with cancer are diagnosed through emergency presentation. Specific types of cancer, older age, and advanced stage at diagnosis are consistently associated with an increased risk of emergency presentation, which strongly predicts worse prognosis and probably contributes to international differences in cancer survival. Monitoring emergency presentations, and identifying and acting on contributing behavioural and health-care factors, is a global priority for cancer control.FUNDING: Canadian Partnership Against Cancer; Cancer Council Victoria; Cancer Institute New South Wales; Cancer Research UK; Danish Cancer Society; National Cancer Registry Ireland; The Cancer Society of New Zealand; National Health Service England; Norwegian Cancer Society; Public Health Agency Northern Ireland, on behalf of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; the Scottish Government; Western Australia Department of Health; and Wales Cancer Network.",
author = "Sean McPhail and Ruth Swann and Johnson, {Shane A} and Barclay, {Matthew E} and {Abd Elkader}, Hazem and Riaz Alvi and Andriana Barisic and Oliver Bucher and Clark, {Gavin R C} and Nicola Creighton and Bolette Danckert and Denny, {Cheryl A} and Donnelly, {David W} and Dowden, {Jeff J} and Norah Finn and Fox, {Colin R} and Sharon Fung and Gavin, {Anna T} and {Gomez Navas}, Elba and Steven Habbous and Jihee Han and Huws, {Dyfed W} and Jackson, {Christopher G C A} and Henry Jensen and Bethany Kaposhi and Kumar, {S Eshwar} and Little, {Alana L} and Shuang Lu and McClure, {Carol A} and Bj{\o}rn M{\o}ller and Grace Musto and Yngvar Nilssen and Nathalie Saint-Jacques and Sabuj Sarker and {Te Marvelde}, Luc and Thomas, {Rebecca S} and Thomas, {Robert J S} and Thomson, {Catherine S} and Woods, {Ryan R} and Bin Zhang and Georgios Lyratzopoulos and {ICBP Module 9 Emergency Presentations Working Group}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
month = may,
doi = "10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "587--600",
journal = "The Lancet Oncology",
issn = "1470-2045",
publisher = "TheLancet Publishing Group",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Risk factors and prognostic implications of diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission (emergency presentation)

T2 - an International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study

AU - McPhail, Sean

AU - Swann, Ruth

AU - Johnson, Shane A

AU - Barclay, Matthew E

AU - Abd Elkader, Hazem

AU - Alvi, Riaz

AU - Barisic, Andriana

AU - Bucher, Oliver

AU - Clark, Gavin R C

AU - Creighton, Nicola

AU - Danckert, Bolette

AU - Denny, Cheryl A

AU - Donnelly, David W

AU - Dowden, Jeff J

AU - Finn, Norah

AU - Fox, Colin R

AU - Fung, Sharon

AU - Gavin, Anna T

AU - Gomez Navas, Elba

AU - Habbous, Steven

AU - Han, Jihee

AU - Huws, Dyfed W

AU - Jackson, Christopher G C A

AU - Jensen, Henry

AU - Kaposhi, Bethany

AU - Kumar, S Eshwar

AU - Little, Alana L

AU - Lu, Shuang

AU - McClure, Carol A

AU - Møller, Bjørn

AU - Musto, Grace

AU - Nilssen, Yngvar

AU - Saint-Jacques, Nathalie

AU - Sarker, Sabuj

AU - Te Marvelde, Luc

AU - Thomas, Rebecca S

AU - Thomas, Robert J S

AU - Thomson, Catherine S

AU - Woods, Ryan R

AU - Zhang, Bin

AU - Lyratzopoulos, Georgios

AU - ICBP Module 9 Emergency Presentations Working Group

N1 - Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022/5

Y1 - 2022/5

N2 - BACKGROUND: Greater understanding of international cancer survival differences is needed. We aimed to identify predictors and consequences of cancer diagnosis through emergency presentation in different international jurisdictions in six high-income countries.METHODS: Using a federated analysis model, in this cross-sectional population-based study, we analysed cancer registration and linked hospital admissions data from 14 jurisdictions in six countries (Australia, Canada, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway, and the UK), including patients with primary diagnosis of invasive oesophageal, stomach, colon, rectal, liver, pancreatic, lung, or ovarian cancer during study periods from Jan 1, 2012, to Dec 31, 2017. Data were collected on cancer site, age group, sex, year of diagnosis, and stage at diagnosis. Emergency presentation was defined as diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission. Using logistic regression, we examined variables associated with emergency presentation and associations between emergency presentation and short-term mortality. We meta-analysed estimates across jurisdictions and explored jurisdiction-level associations between cancer survival and the percentage of patients diagnosed as emergencies.FINDINGS: In 857 068 patients across 14 jurisdictions, considering all of the eight cancer sites together, the percentage of diagnoses through emergency presentation ranged from 24·0% (9165 of 38 212 patients) to 42·5% (12 238 of 28 794 patients). There was consistently large variation in the percentage of emergency presentations by cancer site across jurisdictions. Pancreatic cancer diagnoses had the highest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (46·1% [30 972 of 67 173 patients]), with the jurisdictional range being 34·1% (1083 of 3172 patients) to 60·4% (1317 of 2182 patients). Rectal cancer had the lowest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (12·1% [10 051 of 83 325 patients]), with a jurisdictional range of 9·1% (403 of 4438 patients) to 19·8% (643 of 3247 patients). Across the jurisdictions, older age (ie, 75-84 years and 85 years or older, compared with younger patients) and advanced stage at diagnosis compared with non-advanced stage were consistently associated with increased emergency presentation risk, with the percentage of emergency presentations being highest in the oldest age group (85 years or older) for 110 (98%) of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, and in the most advanced (distant spread) stage category for 98 (97%) of 101 jurisdiction-cancer site strata with available information. Across the jurisdictions, and despite heterogeneity in association size (I2=93%), emergency presenters consistently had substantially greater risk of 12-month mortality than non-emergency presenters (odds ratio >1·9 for 112 [100%] of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, with the minimum lower bound of the related 95% CIs being 1·26). There were negative associations between jurisdiction-level percentage of emergency presentations and jurisdiction-level 1-year survival for colon, stomach, lung, liver, pancreatic, and ovarian cancer, with a 10% increase in percentage of emergency presentations in a jurisdiction being associated with a decrease in 1-year net survival of between 2·5% (95% CI 0·28-4·7) and 7·0% (1·2-13·0).INTERPRETATION: Internationally, notable proportions of patients with cancer are diagnosed through emergency presentation. Specific types of cancer, older age, and advanced stage at diagnosis are consistently associated with an increased risk of emergency presentation, which strongly predicts worse prognosis and probably contributes to international differences in cancer survival. Monitoring emergency presentations, and identifying and acting on contributing behavioural and health-care factors, is a global priority for cancer control.FUNDING: Canadian Partnership Against Cancer; Cancer Council Victoria; Cancer Institute New South Wales; Cancer Research UK; Danish Cancer Society; National Cancer Registry Ireland; The Cancer Society of New Zealand; National Health Service England; Norwegian Cancer Society; Public Health Agency Northern Ireland, on behalf of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; the Scottish Government; Western Australia Department of Health; and Wales Cancer Network.

AB - BACKGROUND: Greater understanding of international cancer survival differences is needed. We aimed to identify predictors and consequences of cancer diagnosis through emergency presentation in different international jurisdictions in six high-income countries.METHODS: Using a federated analysis model, in this cross-sectional population-based study, we analysed cancer registration and linked hospital admissions data from 14 jurisdictions in six countries (Australia, Canada, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway, and the UK), including patients with primary diagnosis of invasive oesophageal, stomach, colon, rectal, liver, pancreatic, lung, or ovarian cancer during study periods from Jan 1, 2012, to Dec 31, 2017. Data were collected on cancer site, age group, sex, year of diagnosis, and stage at diagnosis. Emergency presentation was defined as diagnosis of cancer within 30 days after an emergency hospital admission. Using logistic regression, we examined variables associated with emergency presentation and associations between emergency presentation and short-term mortality. We meta-analysed estimates across jurisdictions and explored jurisdiction-level associations between cancer survival and the percentage of patients diagnosed as emergencies.FINDINGS: In 857 068 patients across 14 jurisdictions, considering all of the eight cancer sites together, the percentage of diagnoses through emergency presentation ranged from 24·0% (9165 of 38 212 patients) to 42·5% (12 238 of 28 794 patients). There was consistently large variation in the percentage of emergency presentations by cancer site across jurisdictions. Pancreatic cancer diagnoses had the highest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (46·1% [30 972 of 67 173 patients]), with the jurisdictional range being 34·1% (1083 of 3172 patients) to 60·4% (1317 of 2182 patients). Rectal cancer had the lowest percentage of emergency presentations on average overall (12·1% [10 051 of 83 325 patients]), with a jurisdictional range of 9·1% (403 of 4438 patients) to 19·8% (643 of 3247 patients). Across the jurisdictions, older age (ie, 75-84 years and 85 years or older, compared with younger patients) and advanced stage at diagnosis compared with non-advanced stage were consistently associated with increased emergency presentation risk, with the percentage of emergency presentations being highest in the oldest age group (85 years or older) for 110 (98%) of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, and in the most advanced (distant spread) stage category for 98 (97%) of 101 jurisdiction-cancer site strata with available information. Across the jurisdictions, and despite heterogeneity in association size (I2=93%), emergency presenters consistently had substantially greater risk of 12-month mortality than non-emergency presenters (odds ratio >1·9 for 112 [100%] of 112 jurisdiction-cancer site strata, with the minimum lower bound of the related 95% CIs being 1·26). There were negative associations between jurisdiction-level percentage of emergency presentations and jurisdiction-level 1-year survival for colon, stomach, lung, liver, pancreatic, and ovarian cancer, with a 10% increase in percentage of emergency presentations in a jurisdiction being associated with a decrease in 1-year net survival of between 2·5% (95% CI 0·28-4·7) and 7·0% (1·2-13·0).INTERPRETATION: Internationally, notable proportions of patients with cancer are diagnosed through emergency presentation. Specific types of cancer, older age, and advanced stage at diagnosis are consistently associated with an increased risk of emergency presentation, which strongly predicts worse prognosis and probably contributes to international differences in cancer survival. Monitoring emergency presentations, and identifying and acting on contributing behavioural and health-care factors, is a global priority for cancer control.FUNDING: Canadian Partnership Against Cancer; Cancer Council Victoria; Cancer Institute New South Wales; Cancer Research UK; Danish Cancer Society; National Cancer Registry Ireland; The Cancer Society of New Zealand; National Health Service England; Norwegian Cancer Society; Public Health Agency Northern Ireland, on behalf of the Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; the Scottish Government; Western Australia Department of Health; and Wales Cancer Network.

U2 - 10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9

DO - 10.1016/S1470-2045(22)00127-9

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35397210

VL - 23

SP - 587

EP - 600

JO - The Lancet Oncology

JF - The Lancet Oncology

SN - 1470-2045

IS - 5

ER -