Home
Scholarly Works
Delays in diagnosis and treatment among children...
Journal article

Delays in diagnosis and treatment among children and adolescents with cancer in Canada

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Few studies have investigated delays in diagnosis and treatment among children and adolescents with cancer, especially from the perspective of an entire country. Detailed understanding of delays along the continuum of cancer patient care is important in order to establish appropriate benchmarks for timely oncological care. Our objective was to characterise the different components of delay in 2,896 Canadian children and adolescents (aged 0-19 years) with cancer that were enrolled in the Treatment and Outcome Surveillance component of the Canadian Childhood Cancer Surveillance and Control Program from 1995 to 2000. PROCEDURE: We examined median and standardised means concerning the distribution of delay times across categories of pertinent variables and over time. The word "delay" was used simply to represent a time interval, measured in days, without implying whether this interval exceeded a particular threshold of clinical acceptability. RESULTS: The median times (and inter-quartile ranges) for patient, diagnosis and healthcare system delays for all cancers were 9 (1-31), 30 (13-69) and 12 (4-35) days, respectively. The median total delay was 34 (16-76) days. CONCLUSIONS: Patient and referral delays were the longest time segments influencing timely diagnosis. Differences in delays were observed across age groups, cancer types and geographical regions. There was a significant trend for decreasing delays to diagnosis and treatment.

Authors

Dang‐Tan T; Trottier H; Mery LS; Morrison HI; Barr RD; Greenberg ML; Franco EL

Journal

Pediatric Blood & Cancer, Vol. 51, No. 4, pp. 468–474

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

October 1, 2008

DOI

10.1002/pbc.21600

ISSN

1545-5009

Contact the Experts team