Lower Gastrointestinal Cancer
Lower Gastrointestinal Cancer
Urgent suspicion of cancer referral - high-risk features
Mass (No qFIT required) |
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Patient Factors |
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qFIT > 10 |
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Indications for qFIT (when available in primary care) or Urgent – Suspicion of Cancer referral (when qFIT is secondary care only test according to local protocols)
Bleeding |
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Bowel habit |
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Pain |
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Iron deficiency anemia |
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An abdominal and rectal examination plus blood tests to assess renal function (in case of triage straight to CT colonography), liver function tests and to identify iron deficiency anaemia and thrombocytosis should be performed on all people with symptoms suggestive of colorectal cancer. Thrombocytosis is a risk marker for underlying cancer, including colorectal, and this can facilitate appropriate triage in secondary care. A negative rectal examination, or a recent negative bowel screening test, should not rule out the need to refer. The carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) test should not be used as a screening tool.
Good practice points
- Recommend qFIT testing, where available, for patients with persistent new colorectal non-USOC symptoms where referral to secondary care is being considered
- In patients <40 years old with persistent diarrhoea, a calprotectin should be considered where available
- Where a patient has persistent symptoms and a qFIT < 10µgHb/g faeces, a second qFIT is recommended (link to full guidance) A secondary care referral is recommended if the second qFIT is ³ 10µgHb/g. If the second qFIT is <10µg Hb/g faeces please see primary care management below.
- Consider the possibility of ovarian cancer as per gynaecological cancers guideline
Primary care management
- Low risk features:
- transient symptoms (less than four weeks) – NO qFIT required
- patients under 40 years in absence of high risk features
- Watch and wait (four weeks)
- Assessment and review
- Consider bowel diary
- Appropriate information, counselling and agreed plan for review with GP
- Patients with a qFIT < 10µgHb/g faeces should only be referred if (please specify in the referral)
- symptom management support from secondary care is required OR
- you have ongoing clinical concerns that the patient has significant colorectal pathology, despite two f-Hb <10µgHb/g faeces e.g. severe persistent symptoms
- For genetics queries, please refer to regional guidance (see appendix 5).