Presentation of cancer to hospital as ‘acute abdominal pain’
- 1 June 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in British Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 67 (6) , 413-416
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.1800670610
Abstract
Summary: In a survey of 5675 patients presenting to five hospitals in England, Scotland and Denmark with acute undiagnosed abdominal pain, 106 patients later proved to have intraabdominal cancer. The risk of cancer was age-dependent: amongst patients over 50 years with ‘non-specific’ pain the risk of cancer was 10 per cent. The commonest primary cancer site (in 57 cases, 53·8 per cent) was the large bowel. Most cancers neither perforated nor obstructed: 73 patients merely presented with a short history of unexplained abdominal pain.Of those patients with cancer presenting with ‘unexplained’ pain, haaf (37/73, 50·7 per cent) left hospital without a diagnosis of cancer having been made. Subsequently, a computer-aided system was constructed to discriminate (in patients over the age of 50) between those with unexplained acute abdominal pain who did and did not have cancer. Overall accuracy was 84.7 per cent in 138 cases. The most helpful clinical features in making this discrimination are listed.It is suggested (a) that cancer is now a relatively common cause of acute abdominal pain, (b) that the diagnosis is frequently difficult and (c) that urgent screening of all patients over 50 with non-specific acute abdominal pain may be warranted.Keywords
Funding Information
- Medical Research Council
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diagnosis of acute abdominal pain in the accident and emergency departmentBritish Journal of Surgery, 1977
- Outpatient screening for gastrointestinal lesions using guaiac-impregnated slidesDigestive Diseases and Sciences, 1974
- Surgical diagnosis assisted by a computerProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1973
- Perforated Peptic Ulcer in the West of Scotland: a Survey of 5,343 Cases During 1954-63BMJ, 1966
- The treatment of acute obstruction or perforation with carcinoma of the colon and rectumBritish Journal of Surgery, 1957
- Results of Surgery in Treatment of Cancer of the Large IntestineBMJ, 1957