How the UK can improve cancer diagnosis

After five years of research involving cancer diagnosis experts from six UK universities, including University of Bristol, researchers have made a number of recommendations on how the UK can improve the early diagnosis of cancer.

  • 2nd June 2015

After five years of research involving cancer diagnosis experts from six UK universities, researchers have made a number of recommendations on how the UK can improve the early diagnosis of cancer.

The findings from the Discovery Programme, a collaboration between the Universities of Bristol, Cambridge, Bangor, Durham, Oxford, Exeter and Bristol NHS Clinical Commissioning Group, were presented at a special event on 2 June.

The Discovery Programme, which was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), encompassed several studies that looked at different aspects of the patient journey to a cancer diagnosis. These have shown that the UK can improve cancer diagnosis in several ways including by:

  • Improving patient awareness campaigns – the findings of the SYMPTOM Study can be used to target the concerns and barriers that prevent people going to see their GP early. Timely cancer diagnosis enables timely treatment and improves patient outcomes.
  • Bringing patients into the decision making process when GPs are considering investigation for possible cancer – listen to their views and explain risks, investigations and options. The PIVOT study found that patients often want to be tested at lower levels of risk than recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE).
  • Supplying GPs with data and decision support tools to give them the potential to be more proactive and cancer aware. Such tools can tell GPs the risk of cancer for particular symptoms and symptom combinations which can help decision making for them and their patients.

Dr Jon Banks, from the University of Bristol’s Centre for Academic Primary Care is the Discovery Programme manager. He said: “Over the course of the five years we have published nearly 20 research papers, a number of which have been used by NICE to formulate its guidelines. While the Discovery Programme has now come to an end, we believe our work will have lasting impact.”

Prof Willie Hamilton from the University of Exeter is the Discovery Programme lead. He added: “Cancer diagnosis is a crucial subject, with over 300,000 UK patients each year developing a cancer. In the UK we don’t perform as well as we could: we know that patients could present quicker to primary care but there is also evidence that, for some, a number of visits are necessary before investigation for possible cancer is started.

“Some patients are diagnosed with cancer in A&E when symptoms and cancer have developed to a point where treatment is more difficult. We hope that our research will go some way to preventing this from happening and prevent hundreds of unnecessary deaths each year.”