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Publication, Part of

Emergency Presentations of Cancer: Quarterly Data, Q4 2021/22 to Q2 2022/23 (January to September 2022)

Official statistics

Current Chapter

Things you need to know about this release


Things you need to know about this release

Background

Emergency presentation is an important predictor of cancer outcomes; patients with a new diagnosis of cancer who first present as an emergency typically suffer poorer outcomes.

The 2015-2020 cancer strategy for England recommended that the proportion of emergency presentations should be regularly reported and reviewed.

This metric estimates the proportion of emergency presentations using first admissions to hospital via emergency route (see Definitions and methods section for more information) as a proxy for emergency diagnosis. The Rapid Cancer Registration Dataset, which provides a quicker indicative source of cancer data compared to finalised cancer registrations, can also provide an alternative view on the data but is not a replacement to the full registration process that is used for all the National Statistics publications.


Points to consider when interpreting these statistics

The first case of Covid-19 was recorded in England in January 2020, and the first Covid-19 lockdown began on 23 March 2020. Data from January 2020 up to at least March 2021 are therefore likely to be influenced by the following potential factors including; changes in patient behaviour possibly resulting in fewer patients contacting their General Practitioner, reduced diagnostic testing capacity and reduced screening services.

There are some cancers where emergency presentation may be the most appropriate route to diagnosis, for example, for children where the first symptom of underlying cancer is likely to result in an emergency presentation on the advice of their GP.

While a fall in emergency presentations may correlate with improved survival, this is not necessarily a direct cause and many other factors will be involved.

The indicator is not adjusted to take account of factors that could influence the health of patients in a geographical area. Geographical areas with an older population can expect to see a larger number of emergency presentations. Geographical areas with a larger number of lung cancers (due to smoking prevalence) or smaller number of breast cancers (due to broader socio-economic factors) can also expect to see a larger proportion of emergency presentations.

The number of cancer patients reported in each quarterly set of emergency presentation results can change over time, due to additional cancer registration information becoming available. As such, the historical quarterly proportions reported may also be subject to small changes.

Smaller populations will have more variability in their estimates than areas with larger populations and will therefore have larger confidence intervals. In addition, small populations (sub-ICBs) will have a larger range of estimates compared to larger populations (CAs), this is because estimates for larger populations are the averages of the estimates of smaller populations.


Definitions and methods

HES

Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) is a database that includes details for all hospital admissions (known as Admitted Patient Care) in England.

 

Emergency Presentations

In this bulletin, an emergency presentation for cancer is defined as a first inpatient admission where the diagnostic code indicates a presentation of cancer, and where there is an emergency method of admission identified from HES Admitted Patient Care (HES-APC).

A first presentation is considered an emergency if the method of admission is either:

  • Emergency: via Accident and Emergency (A&E)
  • Emergency: via general practitioner
  • Emergency: via Bed Bureau (this is emergency occurring while an inpatient (excluding A&E) for another reason)
  • Emergency: via other means including A&E department of another trust.

‘Emergency: via consultant outpatient clinic’ is not considered an emergency presentation. This is because the patient was already within a secondary care setting when referred to the inpatient appointment and therefore the patient’s entry into secondary care is unlikely to be an emergency.

 

First inpatient admissions for cancer

The denominator is the number of first inpatient admissions having a primary diagnostic code indicating a presentation of cancer identified from Admitted Patient Care (HES). The diagnosis codes in HES may not always include references to cancer for care that is not thought to be related to a cancer diagnosis at the time it was given. As the HES data is unlinked to cancer registration data, this may include false positives as well as the false negatives. This means the metric may not include all tumours registered in the National Cancer Registration Dataset) and the results presented here may differ from publicly available results such as Routes to Diagnosis. For full details of the methodology, please refer to the specifications of the Emergency Presentations metric.

 

Crude Proportion

The number of first inpatient admissions for cancer presenting as an emergency, divided by, the total number of first inpatient admissions for cancer, multiplied by 100.

 

Statistical tests

The likelihood ratio test and two-sided proportions Z-test were used to test whether counts or proportions, respectively, were different from each other. Test results with a p-value of less than 0.05 are said to be statistically significant.

 

1-year rolling proportion

The 1-year rolling proportion for a stated quarter includes the previous 3 quarters’ worth of data meaning a full 12 months of data is used. The denominator is then the total number of cancer presentations for those 4 quarters and the numerator is the total emergency presentations for those 4 quarters.


Further information

Other information related to this release are available:

Other statistics on cancer are available:

For queries relating to this bulletin contact [email protected]

 

Related Links

Emergency presentations of cancer collection (previous releases)


Last edited: 9 October 2024 6:13 pm