Abstract
Background and Objectives: The CarePath-CRC electronic clinical decision-making application was designed to assist physicians with evaluation of patients with suspected colorectal cancer (CRC). The physician completes an interactive checklist of evidence-based clinical parameters, and a recommended referral urgency is generated based on the post-test probability of CRC. This study aimed toward validation of the tool in symptomatic patients presenting with rectal bleeding. Methods: The medical records of a sample of patients with histologically confirmed CRC from 2010 to 2014 were reviewed. The CarePath-CRC tool was applied retrospectively to all patients who initially presented with rectal bleeding, to determine its sensitivity for detecting CRC in this population. A generated recommendation of ‘immediate referral’ (referral ≤24 hours, expected endoscopy ≤2 weeks) or ‘urgent referral’ (expected consultation and endoscopy ≤4 and ≤8 weeks) was considered a positive test result. An a priori sensitivity of 90% was deemed adequate, based on test characteristics of the tool’s individual clinical criteria. Results: The tool was applied to 281 patients. A total of 69 (24.6%) and 211 (75.1%) patients met criteria for immediate and urgent referral, respectively. The remaining patient (0.4%) met criteria for ‘possible priority referral’, while none met criteria for ‘no specific action recommended’. This resulted in a calculated sensitivity of 99.6% (95% confidence interval 98.0 to 99.9%). Conclusions: The CarePath-CRC tool is sensitive in the prediction of CRC in patients presenting with rectal bleeding. A prospective cohort study is being designed to allow for acquisition of comprehensive test performance characteristics and full validation of the instrument.
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Forbes, N., Cooray, M., Hackett, M., Shah, N., Yuan, Y., Antiperovitch, P., … Xenodemetropoulos, T. (2020). An electronic clinical decision-making tool for patients with suspected colorectal cancer⇔preliminary evaluation in patients presenting with rectal bleeding. Journal of the Canadian Association of Gastroenterology, 3(5), 204–209. https://doi.org/10.1093/jcag/gwz013
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