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Diagnostic Evaluation of Patients Presenting to Primary Care with Rectal Bleeding
Authors:Sanja Percac-Lima  Lydia E Pace  Kevin H Nguyen  Charis N Crofton  Katharine A Normandin  Sara J Singer  Meredith B Rosenthal  Alyna T Chien
Institution:1.Harvard Medical School,Boston,USA;2.Division of General Internal Medicine,Massachusetts General Hospital,Boston,USA;3.Division of Women’s Health,Brigham and Women’s Hospital,Boston,USA;4.Department of Health Policy and Management,Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,Boston,USA;5.Division of General Pediatrics, Department of Medicine,Boston Children’s Hospital,Boston,USA;6.Mongan Institute,Massachusetts General Hospital,Boston,USA
Abstract:

Background

Rectal bleeding is a common, frequently benign problem that can also be an early sign of colorectal cancer. Diagnostic evaluation for rectal bleeding is complex, and clinical practice may deviate from available guidelines.

Objective

To assess the degree to which primary care physicians document risk factors for colorectal cancer among patients with rectal bleeding and order colonoscopies when indicated, and the likelihood of physicians ordering and patients receiving recommended colonoscopies based on demographic characteristics, visit patterns, and clinical presentations.

Design

Cross-sectional study using explicit chart abstraction methods.

Participants

Three hundred adults, 40–80 years of age, presenting with rectal bleeding to 15 academically affiliated primary care practices between 2012 and 2016.

Main Measures

1) The frequency at which colorectal cancer risk factors were documented in patients’ charts, 2) the frequency at which physicians ordered colonoscopies and patients received them, and 3) the odds of ordering and patients receiving recommended colonoscopies based on patient demographic characteristics, visit patterns, and clinical presentations.

Key Results

Risk factors for colorectal cancer were documented between 9% and 66% of the time. Most patients (89%) with rectal bleeding needed a colonoscopy according to a clinical guideline. Physicians placed colonoscopy orders for 74% of these patients, and 56% completed the colonoscopy within a year (36% within 60 days). The odds of physicians ordering recommended colonoscopies were significantly higher in patients aged 50–64 years of age than in those aged 40–50 years (OR?=?2.23, 95% CI: 1.04, 4.80), and for patients whose most recent colonoscopy was 5 or more years ago (OR?=?4.04, 95% CI: 1.50, 10.83). The odds of physicians ordering and patients receiving recommended colonoscopies were significantly lower for each primary care visit unrelated to rectal bleeding (OR?=?0.85, 95% CI: 0.75, 0.96).

Conclusions

Diagnostic evaluation of patients presenting to primary care with rectal bleeding may be suboptimal because of inadequate risk factor assessment and prioritization of patients’ other concurrent medical problems.
Keywords:
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