Futurity

Knowing lung cancer symptoms boosts visits to doctor

People at high risk of lung cancer should learn to identify and monitor these symptoms.
medical worker holds stethoscope on woman's back

People at high risk of lung cancer are 40 percent more likely to see a doctor when they get help identifying and monitoring their symptoms, a new study shows.

Lung cancer is the most common cancer worldwide, with 1.3 million new diagnoses every year. It has one of the lowest survival outcomes of any cancer because more than two-thirds of patients receive a diagnosis too late for curative treatment.

Increasing early recognition and earlier diagnosis is vital to improve patient outcomes, researchers say. Behavioral interventions in primary care could play an important role.

For the study, which appears in Thorax, people at increased risk of lung cancer due to heavy smoking attended a consultation with a nurse to discuss respiratory symptoms to look out for, and what to do if they had any concerns. Symptoms included: coughing up blood, persistent or worsening cough, becoming shorter of breath, and long-standing chest or shoulder pain.

The control group received no additional information about their respiratory symptoms.

Patients in the randomized controlled trial who received the additional information were 40 percent more likely to visit their doctor about respiratory symptoms over the following year than patients who did not receive a consultation.

“A behavioral intervention like this can significantly increase consulting for respiratory symptoms in patients at increased risk of lung cancer, providing more opportunities for doctors to identify and diagnose lung cancer earlier in these high-risk patients,” says lead author Jon Emery, professor at the University of Melbourne Centre for Cancer Research.

“GPs arming patients with more information could have an important role in primary care as part of a broader approach to improve respiratory health in patients at higher risk.”

Although the study—the largest trial to date to test a tailored behavioral approach to reduce the delay in diagnosis for lung cancer—significantly increased respiratory consultation rates in the study population, without causing psychological harm, it did not significantly reduce the time that patients made a first appointment, researchers say.

“This targeted approach could be an alternative to mass-media symptom awareness campaigns and support early intervention to improve respiratory health in long-term smokers in primary care,” Emery says.

Additional researchers are from the University of Western Australia.

Source: University of Melbourne

The post Knowing lung cancer symptoms boosts visits to doctor appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
How Can Physics Become More Diverse?
A new paper explores the problems with physics culture and provides a road map for making departments in the field more equitable. Physics has long suffered from the perception that the most cutting-edge work is done by lone geniuses, usually white m
Futurity1 min read
How You Can Reverse Insulin Resistance
What is insulin resistance and how can you reverse it? An expert has answers for you. Gerald I. Shulman, a professor of medicine (endocrinology) and cellular and molecular physiology, investigator emeritus of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and
Futurity3 min read
Team Pins Down Huge Cost Of Mental Illness In The US
A new analysis of the economic toll of mental illness considers a host of adverse economic outcomes not considered in earlier estimates. Mental illness costs the US economy $282 billion annually, which is equivalent to the average economic recession,

Related