Testing and cancer diagnosis in general practice
Healthcare systems worldwide have for decades sought to prioritise prompt diagnosis of cancer as a means to improve outcomes. The gatekeeping role of general practitioners (GPs) that restricts access to testing and referral,1 along with their relatively lower propensity to use diagnostic tests,2 has been offered as partial explanations for the UK’s consistently poor performance in cancer compared with other high-income countries.3
In this issue of BMJ Quality & Safety, Akter and colleagues examined primary care investigations prior to a cancer diagnosis using data on 53 252 patients and 1868 general practices from the 2018 English National Cancer Diagnostic Audit.4 Grouping tests into four categories (any investigation, blood tests, imaging and endoscopy), the study demonstrated large variation in use of tests in general practice prior to diagnosis with cancer. Recorded characteristics of practices accounted for only a small proportion of this variation,...