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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 4/2004

01-04-2004 | Original Article

Nonscheduled consultation in oncologic patients. How many of them are true emergencies? An observational prospective study

Authors: F. A. Díaz-Couselo, J. M. O’Connor, A. Nervo, G. Tossen, A. Guercovich, C. Puparelli, C. Coronado, V. Costanzo, M. Zylberman

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 4/2004

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Abstract

Oncologic emergencies have been extensively described and clearly defined. In oncology daily practice, cancer patients seek nonscheduled medical care in situations they perceive as a medical emergency, but which may not be a true emergency. The aim of the study was to identify the main symptoms leading to a nonscheduled consultation (NSC) and their relationship to the type of cancer, and to evaluate whether the diagnosis at discharge of patients admitted as result of a NSC correlates with a true oncologic emergency. This was a prospective observational study. Between July 2002 and April 2003, 365 NSCs were recorded. The most frequent baseline diseases were breast cancer (70), lung cancer (67), gastrointestinal cancer (52), lymphoma (42) and ovarian cancer (22). The most common symptoms for consultation were: fever (84), pain (81), cutaneous manifestations (26), dyspnea (23), bleeding (16) and abdominal distention (16). Overall, 114 of 365 NSCs (31%) resulted in admission. The most frequent symptoms resulting in admission were fever (42), pain (16), dyspnea (11), vomiting (9), neurologic manifestations (7), abdominal distention (6) and anuria (6). At discharge, only 30 patients (26%) admitted after a NSC were diagnosed with a defined oncologic emergency: febrile neutropenia (13), intestinal occlusion (12), obstructive uropathy (4) and abdominal perforation (1). True emergencies were not the most frequent causes of NSC at our institution.
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Metadata
Title
Nonscheduled consultation in oncologic patients. How many of them are true emergencies? An observational prospective study
Authors
F. A. Díaz-Couselo
J. M. O’Connor
A. Nervo
G. Tossen
A. Guercovich
C. Puparelli
C. Coronado
V. Costanzo
M. Zylberman
Publication date
01-04-2004
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 4/2004
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-003-0584-z

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