General Practice and Primary Care - Research Publications

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    The Improving Rural Cancer Outcomes Trial: a cluster-randomised controlled trial of a complex intervention to reduce time to diagnosis in rural cancer patients in Western Australia (vol 117, pg 1459, 2017)
    Emery, JD ; Gray, V ; Walter, FM ; Cheetham, S ; Croager, EJ ; Slevin, T ; Saunders, C ; Threlfall, T ; Auret, K ; Nowak, AK ; Geelhoed, E ; Bulsara, M ; Holman, CDJ (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2018-03-20)
    This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.310.
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    Integrated care for resected early stage lung cancer: innovations and exploring patient needs
    Ho, J ; McWilliams, A ; Emery, J ; Saunders, C ; Reid, C ; Robinson, S ; Brims, F (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2017-11)
    There is no consensus as to the duration and nature of follow-up following surgical resection with curative intent of lung cancer. The integration of cancer follow-up into primary care is likely to be a key future area for quality and cost-effective cancer care. Evidence from other solid cancer types demonstrates that such follow-up has no adverse outcomes, similar health-related quality of life, high patient satisfaction rates at a lower cost to the healthcare system. Core elements for successful models of shared cancer care are required: clear roles and responsibilities, timely effective communication, guidance on follow-up protocols and common treatments and rapid routes to (re)access specialist care. There is thus a need for improved communication between hospital specialists and primary care. Unmet needs for patients with early stage lung cancer are likely to include psychological symptoms and carer stress; the importance of smoking cessation may frequently be overlooked or underappreciated in the current hospital-based follow-up system. There is therefore a need for quality randomised controlled trials of patients with resected early stage lung cancer to establish optimal protocols for primary care-based follow-up and to more adequately address patients' and carers' unmet psychosocial needs, including the crucial role of smoking cessation.
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    The Improving Rural Cancer Outcomes Trial: a cluster-randomised controlled trial of a complex intervention to reduce time to diagnosis in rural cancer patients in Western Australia
    Emery, JD ; Gray, V ; Walter, FM ; Cheetham, S ; Croager, EJ ; Slevin, T ; Saunders, C ; Threlfall, T ; Auret, K ; Nowak, AK ; Geelhoed, E ; Bulsara, M ; Holman, CDJ (SPRINGERNATURE, 2017-11-07)
    BACKGROUND: Rural Australians have poorer survival for most common cancers, due partially to later diagnosis. Internationally, several initiatives to improve cancer outcomes have focused on earlier presentation to healthcare and timely diagnosis. We aimed to measure the effect of community-based symptom awareness and general practice-based educational interventions on the time to diagnosis in rural patients presenting with breast, prostate, colorectal or lung cancer in Western Australia. METHODS: 2 × 2 factorial cluster randomised controlled trial. Community Intervention: cancer symptom awareness campaign tailored for rural Australians. GP intervention: resource card with symptom risk assessment charts and local cancer referral pathways implemented through multiple academic detailing visits. Trial Area A received the community symptom awareness and Trial Area B acted as the community campaign control region. Within both Trial Areas general practices were randomised to the GP intervention or control. PRIMARY OUTCOME: total diagnostic interval (TDI). RESULTS: 1358 people with incident breast, prostate, colorectal or lung cancer were recruited. There were no significant differences in the median or ln mean TDI at either intervention level (community intervention vs control: median TDI 107.5 vs 92 days; ln mean difference 0.08 95% CI -0.06-0.23 P=0.27; GP intervention vs control: median TDI 97 vs 96.5 days; ln mean difference 0.004 95% CI -0.18-0.19 P=0.99). There were no significant differences in the TDI when analysed by factorial design, tumour group or sub-intervals of the TDI. CONCLUSIONS: This is the largest trial to test the effect of community campaign or GP interventions on timeliness of cancer diagnosis. We found no effect of either intervention. This may reflect limited dose of the interventions, or the limited duration of follow-up. Alternatively, these interventions do not have a measurable effect on time to cancer diagnosis.
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    Diagnosing cancer in the bush: a mixed methods study of GP and specialist diagnostic intervals in rural Western Australia
    Emery, JD ; Walter, FM ; Gray, V ; Sinclair, C ; Howting, D ; Bulsara, M ; Bulsara, C ; Webster, A ; Auret, K ; Saunders, C ; Nowak, A ; Holman, D (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2013-10)
    BACKGROUND: Previous studies have focused on the treatment received by rural cancer patients and have not examined their diagnostic pathways as reasons for poorer outcomes in rural Australia. OBJECTIVES: To compare and explore diagnostic pathways and diagnostic intervals in patients with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from rural Western Australia (WA) to inform future interventions aimed at reducing time to cancer diagnosis. METHODS: Mixed methods study of people recently diagnosed with breast, lung, prostate or colorectal cancer from the Goldfields and Great Southern Regions of WA. Qualitative interviews explored participants' diagnostic pathways and factors underlying differences observed between individuals and cancers. Data were extracted from general practice and hospital records to calculate intervals from first presentation in general practice to final diagnosis. RESULTS: Sixty-six participants were recruited (43 Goldfields and 23 Great Southern region; 24 breast, 20 colorectal, 14 prostate and 8 lung cancers). There were significant overall differences between cancers in time from presentation in general practice to referral (P = 0.045), from referral to seeing a specialist (P = 0.010) and from specialist appointment to cancer diagnosis (P ≤ 0.001). These differences were due to the nature of presenting symptoms, access to diagnostic tests and multiple visits to specialists. Breast cancer was diagnosed more quickly because its symptoms are more specific and due to better access to diagnostic tests and specialist one-stop clinics. CONCLUSIONS: Interventions to improve cancer diagnosis in rural Australia should focus on better case selection in general practice and better access to diagnostic tests, especially for prostate and colorectal cancers.
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    The Improving Rural Cancer Outcomes (IRCO) Trial: a factorial cluster-randomised controlled trial of a complex intervention to reduce time to diagnosis in rural patients with cancer in Western Australia: a study protocol
    Emery, JD ; Gray, V ; Walter, FM ; Cheetham, S ; Croager, EJ ; Slevin, T ; Saunders, C ; Threlfall, T ; Auret, K ; Nowak, AK ; Geelhoed, E ; Bulsara, M ; Holman, CDJ (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2014)
    INTRODUCTION: While overall survival for most common cancers in Australia is improving, the rural-urban differential has been widening, with significant excess deaths due to lung, colorectal, breast and prostate cancer in regional Australia. Internationally a major focus on understanding variations in cancer outcomes has been later presentation to healthcare and later diagnosis. Approaches to reducing time to diagnosis of symptomatic cancer include public symptom awareness campaigns and interventions in primary care to improve early cancer detection. This paper reports the protocol of a factorial cluster-randomised trial of community and general practice (GP) level interventions to reduce the time to diagnosis of cancer in rural Western Australia (WA). METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The community intervention is a symptom awareness campaign tailored for rural Australians delivered through a community engagement model. The GP intervention includes a resource card with symptom risk assessment charts and local referral pathways implemented through multiple academic detailing visits and case studies. Participants are eligible if recently diagnosed with breast, colorectal, lung or prostate cancer who reside in specific regions of rural WA with a planned sample size of 1350. The primary outcome is the Total Diagnostic Interval, defined as the duration from first symptom (or date of cancer screening test) to cancer diagnosis. Secondary outcomes include cancer stage, healthcare utilisation, disease-free status, survival at 2 and 5 years and cost-effectiveness. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethics approval has been granted by the University of Western Australia and from all relevant hospital recruitment sites in WA. RESULTS: Results of this trial will be reported in peer-reviewed publications and in conference presentations. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR). ACTRN12610000872033.