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Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer: which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more?

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Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer: which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more? / Mohammad, Hasan Raza; Boardman, Jeremy; Howell, Laura et al.
In: BMC Neurology, Vol. 16, No. 1, 152, 26.08.2016.

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Mohammad HR, Boardman J, Howell L, Mills RJ, Emsley HCA. Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer: which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more? BMC Neurology. 2016 Aug 26;16(1):152. doi: 10.1186/s12883-016-0677-1

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Mohammad, Hasan Raza ; Boardman, Jeremy ; Howell, Laura et al. / Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer : which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more?. In: BMC Neurology. 2016 ; Vol. 16, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{3d6b006d9f464a5bab7737eb97ae25b1,
title = "Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer: which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more?",
abstract = "Background: Urgent referral for suspected central nervous system (CNS) cancer is recommended, but little analysis of the referral criteria diagnostic performance has been conducted. New 2015 NICE guidance recommends direct brain imaging for patients with symptoms with positive predictive values (PPV) of 3 %, but further guidance is needed. Methods: A 12-month retrospective evaluation of 393 patients referred under previous 2005 NICE 2-week rule criteria was conducted. Analysis was based on the three groups of symptoms forming the referral criteria, (1) CNS symptoms, (2) recent onset headaches, (3) rapidly progressive subacute focal deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change. Comparison was made with neuroimaging findings. Results: Twelve (3.1 %) of 383 patients who attended clinic had CNS cancer suggesting the combination of clinical judgement and application of 2005 criteria matched the 2015 guideline's PPV threshold. PPVs for the three groups of symptoms were (1) 4.1 % (95 % CIs 2.0 to 7.4 %), (2) 1.2 % (0.1 to 4.3 %) and (3) 3.7 % (0.1 to 19.0 %). Sensitivities were (1) 83.3 % (95 % CIs 51.6 to 97.9 %), (2) 16.7 % (2.1 to 48.4 %), and (3) 8.3 % (0.2 to 38.5 %); specificities were (1) 37.2 % (32.3 to 42.3 %), (2) 55.5 % (50.3 to 60.7 %) and (3) 93.0 % (89.9 to 95.4 %). Of 288 patients who underwent neuroimaging, 59 (20.5 %) had incidental findings, most commonly cerebrovascular disease. Conclusions: The 2015 guidance is less prescriptive than previous criteria making clinical judgement more important. CNS symptoms had greatest sensitivity, while PPVs for CNS symptoms and rapidly progressive subacute deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change were closest to 3 %. Recent onset headaches had the lowest sensitivity and PPV.",
keywords = "CNS cancer, NICE guidance, Positive predictive value, Retrospective study, Two-week referral",
author = "Mohammad, {Hasan Raza} and Jeremy Boardman and Laura Howell and Mills, {Roger J.} and Emsley, {Hedley C. A.}",
year = "2016",
month = aug,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1186/s12883-016-0677-1",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "BMC Neurology",
issn = "1471-2377",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Urgent referral for suspected CNS cancer

T2 - which clinical features are associated with a positive predictive value of 3 % or more?

AU - Mohammad, Hasan Raza

AU - Boardman, Jeremy

AU - Howell, Laura

AU - Mills, Roger J.

AU - Emsley, Hedley C. A.

PY - 2016/8/26

Y1 - 2016/8/26

N2 - Background: Urgent referral for suspected central nervous system (CNS) cancer is recommended, but little analysis of the referral criteria diagnostic performance has been conducted. New 2015 NICE guidance recommends direct brain imaging for patients with symptoms with positive predictive values (PPV) of 3 %, but further guidance is needed. Methods: A 12-month retrospective evaluation of 393 patients referred under previous 2005 NICE 2-week rule criteria was conducted. Analysis was based on the three groups of symptoms forming the referral criteria, (1) CNS symptoms, (2) recent onset headaches, (3) rapidly progressive subacute focal deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change. Comparison was made with neuroimaging findings. Results: Twelve (3.1 %) of 383 patients who attended clinic had CNS cancer suggesting the combination of clinical judgement and application of 2005 criteria matched the 2015 guideline's PPV threshold. PPVs for the three groups of symptoms were (1) 4.1 % (95 % CIs 2.0 to 7.4 %), (2) 1.2 % (0.1 to 4.3 %) and (3) 3.7 % (0.1 to 19.0 %). Sensitivities were (1) 83.3 % (95 % CIs 51.6 to 97.9 %), (2) 16.7 % (2.1 to 48.4 %), and (3) 8.3 % (0.2 to 38.5 %); specificities were (1) 37.2 % (32.3 to 42.3 %), (2) 55.5 % (50.3 to 60.7 %) and (3) 93.0 % (89.9 to 95.4 %). Of 288 patients who underwent neuroimaging, 59 (20.5 %) had incidental findings, most commonly cerebrovascular disease. Conclusions: The 2015 guidance is less prescriptive than previous criteria making clinical judgement more important. CNS symptoms had greatest sensitivity, while PPVs for CNS symptoms and rapidly progressive subacute deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change were closest to 3 %. Recent onset headaches had the lowest sensitivity and PPV.

AB - Background: Urgent referral for suspected central nervous system (CNS) cancer is recommended, but little analysis of the referral criteria diagnostic performance has been conducted. New 2015 NICE guidance recommends direct brain imaging for patients with symptoms with positive predictive values (PPV) of 3 %, but further guidance is needed. Methods: A 12-month retrospective evaluation of 393 patients referred under previous 2005 NICE 2-week rule criteria was conducted. Analysis was based on the three groups of symptoms forming the referral criteria, (1) CNS symptoms, (2) recent onset headaches, (3) rapidly progressive subacute focal deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change. Comparison was made with neuroimaging findings. Results: Twelve (3.1 %) of 383 patients who attended clinic had CNS cancer suggesting the combination of clinical judgement and application of 2005 criteria matched the 2015 guideline's PPV threshold. PPVs for the three groups of symptoms were (1) 4.1 % (95 % CIs 2.0 to 7.4 %), (2) 1.2 % (0.1 to 4.3 %) and (3) 3.7 % (0.1 to 19.0 %). Sensitivities were (1) 83.3 % (95 % CIs 51.6 to 97.9 %), (2) 16.7 % (2.1 to 48.4 %), and (3) 8.3 % (0.2 to 38.5 %); specificities were (1) 37.2 % (32.3 to 42.3 %), (2) 55.5 % (50.3 to 60.7 %) and (3) 93.0 % (89.9 to 95.4 %). Of 288 patients who underwent neuroimaging, 59 (20.5 %) had incidental findings, most commonly cerebrovascular disease. Conclusions: The 2015 guidance is less prescriptive than previous criteria making clinical judgement more important. CNS symptoms had greatest sensitivity, while PPVs for CNS symptoms and rapidly progressive subacute deficit/cognitive/behavioural/personality change were closest to 3 %. Recent onset headaches had the lowest sensitivity and PPV.

KW - CNS cancer

KW - NICE guidance

KW - Positive predictive value

KW - Retrospective study

KW - Two-week referral

U2 - 10.1186/s12883-016-0677-1

DO - 10.1186/s12883-016-0677-1

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84983490958

VL - 16

JO - BMC Neurology

JF - BMC Neurology

SN - 1471-2377

IS - 1

M1 - 152

ER -