A trigger built in patient EHRs can avoid follow-up delays in those at risk for developing certain types of cancers, a JCO study shows.
A missed opportunity to follow up on abnormal clinical findings can delay cancer diagnosis, add to patient anxiety, and may even result in poor clinical outcomes. Even with the advantage that electronic health records (EHRs) present, failure to receive, recognize or process patient information can result in delays. Now, a paper published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology claims to have developed a trigger algorithm for EHRs that can avoid these delays.
According to Daniel Murphy, MD, MBA, lead author on the paper, “Triggers can act as safeguards as long as the information about potential delays can be communicated to clinicians taking care of these patients.”
Murphy and his coauthors included 72 primary care providers (PCPs) at 2 different sites in the randomized controlled trial that was conducted over a period of 1 year. The triggers in the EHRs at these sites purported to reduce time to follow-up diagnostic evaluation in patients with potential delays in evaluation for lung, colorectal, or prostate cancer. Interventions included queries of the EHR repositories of the flagged patients who did not have associated follow-up, manual review of triggered records, e-mail communication to PCPs, and phone calls if needed.
Time to diagnostic evaluation was compared between control and intervention groups from among 1256 patients. The authors found that median time to diagnostic evaluation in the intervention group was significantly lower than the control group for both the colorectal trigger group (104 days v 200 days; P<.001) and the prostate trigger group (144 days v 192 days; P<.001) but not for the lung trigger group (65 days v 93 days; P = .59). At the time of final review, a significantly greater number of intervention patients received diagnostic evaluations.
These findings have potential implications for ongoing efforts to improve timeliness of cancer diagnosis and can help health care organizations identify patients at risk for delays, the authors conclude.
Senior author Hardeep Singh, MD, MPH, said, “Missed or delayed diagnoses are among the most common patient safety concerns in outpatient settings, and measuring and reducing them are a high priority. Solutions that harvest and put to use the vast amount of electronic clinical data being collected are essential."
FIT Completion, Yield Rates in CRC Screening Similar After New Screening Guidelines
October 22nd 2024Patients were found to have similar completion and yield rates for the fecal immunochemical test (FIT) at both 45 years and 50 years, making screening for colorectal cancer (CRC) effective in younger patients.
Read More
The Latest in New and Emerging Therapies in Schizophrenia: Dr Megan Ehret
October 22nd 2024In addition to Cobenfy being approved for schizophrenia, there are other drugs with novel mechanisms being studied that may mean combination therapies or, at least, more options for patients in the future.
Read More
Lower Diagnostic Error Rates Found Among Hospitalized Patients During Care Transitions
October 21st 2024Examining care transitions in hospitalized patients revealed lower diagnostic error rates compared with traditional methods, highlighting the effectiveness of this approach in identifying diagnostic challenges.
Read More
A Novel Approach to Chronic GVHD With Axatilimab: Dr Daniel Wolff
October 18th 2024The latest therapy approved to treat chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) has a new target different than the other approved therapies. Daniel Wolff, MD, also discusses future research on axatilimab to treat chronic GVHD earlier.
Read More