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A feasibility study examining the effect on lung cancer diagnosis of offering a chest X-ray to higher-risk patients with chest symptoms: protocol for a randomized controlled trial

A feasibility study examining the effect on lung cancer diagnosis of offering a chest X-ray to higher-risk patients with chest symptoms: protocol for a randomized controlled trial
A feasibility study examining the effect on lung cancer diagnosis of offering a chest X-ray to higher-risk patients with chest symptoms: protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Baclground: in order to improve lung cancer survival in the UK, a greater proportion of resectable cancers must be diagnosed. It is likely that resectability rates would be increased by more timely diagnosis. Aside from screening, the only way of achieving this is to reduce the time to diagnosis in symptomatic cancers. Currently, lung cancers are mainly diagnosed by general practitioners (GPs) using the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for urgent referral for chest X-ray, which recommend urgent imaging or referral for patients who have one of a number of chest symptoms for more than 3 weeks. We are proposing to expand this recommendation to include one of a number of chest symptoms of any duration in higher-risk patients.

Methods/design: we intend to conduct a trial of imaging in these higher-risk patients and compare it with NICE guidelines to see if imaging improves stage at diagnosis and resection rates. This trial would have to be large (and consequently resource-intensive) because most of these patients will not have lung cancer, making optimal design crucial. We are therefore conducting a pilot trial that will ascertain the feasibility of running a full trial and provide key information that will be required in order to design the full trial.

Discussion: this trial will assess the feasibility and inform the design of a large, UK-wide, clinical trial of a change to the NICE guidelines for urgent referral for chest X-ray for suspected lung cancer. It utilizes a combination of workshop, health economic, quality of life, qualitative, and quantitative methods in order to fully assess feasibility.

Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01344005.

Clinical Protocols, Data Collection, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Outcome Assessment (Health Care), Radiography, Thoracic, Research Design, Risk, Sample Size, Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1745-6215
Hurt, Christopher N.
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Roberts, Kirsty
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Rogers, Trevor K
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Griffiths, Gareth O.
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Hood, Kerry
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Prout, Hayley
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Nelson, Annmarie
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Fitzgibbon, Jim
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Barham, Allan
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Thomas-Jones, Emma
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Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor
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Yeo, Seow Tien
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Hamilton, William
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Tod, Angela
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Neal, Richard D.
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et al.
Hurt, Christopher N.
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Roberts, Kirsty
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Rogers, Trevor K
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Griffiths, Gareth O.
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Hood, Kerry
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Prout, Hayley
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Nelson, Annmarie
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Fitzgibbon, Jim
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Barham, Allan
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Thomas-Jones, Emma
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Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor
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Yeo, Seow Tien
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Hamilton, William
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Tod, Angela
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Neal, Richard D.
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Hurt, Christopher N., Roberts, Kirsty and Rogers, Trevor K , et al. (2013) A feasibility study examining the effect on lung cancer diagnosis of offering a chest X-ray to higher-risk patients with chest symptoms: protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials, 14 (1), [405]. (doi:10.1186/1745-6215-14-405).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Baclground: in order to improve lung cancer survival in the UK, a greater proportion of resectable cancers must be diagnosed. It is likely that resectability rates would be increased by more timely diagnosis. Aside from screening, the only way of achieving this is to reduce the time to diagnosis in symptomatic cancers. Currently, lung cancers are mainly diagnosed by general practitioners (GPs) using the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for urgent referral for chest X-ray, which recommend urgent imaging or referral for patients who have one of a number of chest symptoms for more than 3 weeks. We are proposing to expand this recommendation to include one of a number of chest symptoms of any duration in higher-risk patients.

Methods/design: we intend to conduct a trial of imaging in these higher-risk patients and compare it with NICE guidelines to see if imaging improves stage at diagnosis and resection rates. This trial would have to be large (and consequently resource-intensive) because most of these patients will not have lung cancer, making optimal design crucial. We are therefore conducting a pilot trial that will ascertain the feasibility of running a full trial and provide key information that will be required in order to design the full trial.

Discussion: this trial will assess the feasibility and inform the design of a large, UK-wide, clinical trial of a change to the NICE guidelines for urgent referral for chest X-ray for suspected lung cancer. It utilizes a combination of workshop, health economic, quality of life, qualitative, and quantitative methods in order to fully assess feasibility.

Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01344005.

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1745-6215-14-405 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 November 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 November 2013
Keywords: Clinical Protocols, Data Collection, Feasibility Studies, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Outcome Assessment (Health Care), Radiography, Thoracic, Research Design, Risk, Sample Size, Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Organisations: Clinical Trials Unit

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 406335
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/406335
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 09d593f1-ec33-4a91-b8a3-3e89d2cddf37
ORCID for Christopher N. Hurt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1206-8355
ORCID for Gareth O. Griffiths: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9579-8021

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2017 10:45
Last modified: 23 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Christopher N. Hurt ORCID iD
Author: Kirsty Roberts
Author: Trevor K Rogers
Author: Kerry Hood
Author: Hayley Prout
Author: Annmarie Nelson
Author: Jim Fitzgibbon
Author: Allan Barham
Author: Emma Thomas-Jones
Author: Rhiannon Tudor Edwards
Author: Seow Tien Yeo
Author: William Hamilton
Author: Angela Tod
Author: Richard D. Neal
Corporate Author: et al.

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