Hamilton William, Barrett Jacqueline, Stapley Sally, Sharp Debbie, Rose Peter
University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter.
Centre for Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol, Bristol.
Br J Gen Pract. 2015 Aug;65(637):e516-22. doi: 10.3399/bjgp15X686077.
How metastatic cancer initially presents is largely unknown.
To identify clinical features of metastatic cancer in primary care.
Case-control study in 11 general practices in Devon, UK.
Cases of patients who had died with metastatic breast, colorectal, or prostate cancer were selected. In addition, two control groups were formed of patients with the same primary cancer but without metastases ('cancer controls') and patients without cancer ('healthy controls'), matched for age, sex, and practice. All symptoms, signs, and laboratory test abnormalities in the year before metastasis were identified. The primary analysis used conditional logistic regression.
In total, 162 cases, 152 cancer controls, and 145 healthy controls were studied. Common symptoms associated with cancer were: vomiting, 40 (25%) cases and 13 (9%) cancer controls (multivariable odds ratio [OR] 3.5, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.3 to 9.4, P = 0.011); low back pain, 38 (24%) cases and 17 (11%) cancer controls (OR 2.5, 95% CI = 1.1 to 5.6, P = 0.032); loss of appetite, 32 (20%) cases and nine (6%) cancer controls (OR 4.0, 95% CI = 1.2 to 13.2, P = 0.021); and shoulder pain, 27 (17%) cases and eight (5%) cancer controls (OR 5.3, 95% CI = 1.6 to 18, P = 0.007). Groin pain was uncommon, but strongly associated (16 [10%] cases and one [1%] cancer control [OR 10, 95% CI = 1.2 to 82, P = 0.032]), as was pleural disease (nine [6%] cases and one [1%] cancer control [OR 10, 95% CI = 1.1 to 92, P = 0.038]).
These features of disseminated cancer have been reported before in studies from secondary care, but the scarcity of specific symptoms (such as local pain) and the fairly common occurrence of non-specific symptoms (vomiting and loss of appetite) is important and may explain delays in the diagnosis of metastases.
转移性癌症最初的表现形式在很大程度上尚不明确。
确定基层医疗中转移性癌症的临床特征。
英国德文郡11家全科诊所的病例对照研究。
选取死于转移性乳腺癌、结直肠癌或前列腺癌的患者病例。此外,形成了两个对照组,一组是患有相同原发性癌症但无转移的患者(“癌症对照组”),另一组是无癌症的患者(“健康对照组”),并根据年龄、性别和诊所进行匹配。确定转移前一年所有的症状、体征和实验室检查异常情况。主要分析采用条件逻辑回归。
总共研究了162例病例、152例癌症对照组和145例健康对照组。与癌症相关的常见症状有:呕吐,病例组40例(25%),癌症对照组13例(9%)(多变量比值比[OR]3.5,95%置信区间[CI]=1.3至9.4,P=0.011);腰痛,病例组38例(24%),癌症对照组17例(11%)(OR 2.5,95%CI=1.1至5.6,P=0.032);食欲不振,病例组32例(20%),癌症对照组9例(6%)(OR 4.0,95%CI=1.2至13.2,P=0.021);以及肩痛,病例组27例(17%),癌症对照组8例(5%)(OR 5.3,95%CI=1.6至18,P=0.007)。腹股沟疼痛不常见,但相关性很强(病例组16例[10%],癌症对照组1例[1%][OR 10,95%CI=1.2至82,P=0.032]),胸膜疾病也是如此(病例组9例[6%],癌症对照组1例[1%][OR 10,95%CI=1.1至92,P=0.038])。
这些播散性癌症的特征在二级医疗研究中之前已有报道,但特定症状(如局部疼痛)的稀缺以及非特异性症状(呕吐和食欲不振)的相当常见很重要,可能解释了转移诊断的延迟。