TY - JOUR
T1 - Evidence for a delay in diagnosis of Wilms' tumour in the UK compared with Germany
T2 - Implications for primary care for children
AU - Pritchard-Jones, Kathy
AU - Graf, Norbert
AU - Van Tinteren, Harm
AU - Craft, Alan
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding The SIOP WT 2001 trial and study received funding from Cancer Research UK (ref: C1188/A11886) and Deutsche Krebshilfe (grant 50-2709-Gr2). The IMPORT study is supported by Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity, with additional development support from two EU-FP7 projects: P-medicine: From data sharing and integration via VPH models to personalised medicine (Grant number 270089) and the European Network for Cancer research in Children and Adolescents (ENCCA, grant number 261474). KP-J is partly supported by the NIHR GOSH UCL Biomedical Research Centre.
PY - 2016/5
Y1 - 2016/5
N2 - The UK has a longstanding system of general practice which provides the vast majority of primary care, including that for children. It acts as a 'gatekeeper' to more specialist care. Parents may also use accident and emergency departments as their first point of medical contact for their children. Outcomes in the UK for many conditions in children appear to be worse than in comparable European countries where there is direct access to care by paediatricians. We have therefore looked at pathways to diagnosis and compared outcomes in the childhood kidney cancer, Wilms' tumour, which has been treated in the UK and Germany within the same clinical trial for over a decade. We find that Wilms' tumours are significantly larger in volume and have a more advanced tumour stage at diagnosis in the UK compared to Germany. There is a small (∼3%) difference in event free and overall survival between the two countries. Our data suggest that the system of primary care for children in the UK is less likely to result in the incidental finding of an abdominal mass in a child with no or vague symptoms. This may be a reason for the poorer outcome.
AB - The UK has a longstanding system of general practice which provides the vast majority of primary care, including that for children. It acts as a 'gatekeeper' to more specialist care. Parents may also use accident and emergency departments as their first point of medical contact for their children. Outcomes in the UK for many conditions in children appear to be worse than in comparable European countries where there is direct access to care by paediatricians. We have therefore looked at pathways to diagnosis and compared outcomes in the childhood kidney cancer, Wilms' tumour, which has been treated in the UK and Germany within the same clinical trial for over a decade. We find that Wilms' tumours are significantly larger in volume and have a more advanced tumour stage at diagnosis in the UK compared to Germany. There is a small (∼3%) difference in event free and overall survival between the two countries. Our data suggest that the system of primary care for children in the UK is less likely to result in the incidental finding of an abdominal mass in a child with no or vague symptoms. This may be a reason for the poorer outcome.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84960855681&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/archdischild-2015-309212
DO - 10.1136/archdischild-2015-309212
M3 - Article
C2 - 26948824
AN - SCOPUS:84960855681
SN - 0003-9888
VL - 101
SP - 417
EP - 420
JO - Archives of Disease in Childhood
JF - Archives of Disease in Childhood
IS - 5
ER -