Irish Independent

Patient unaware they had lung cancer for 18 months after test

Hospital review finds 11 people did not get timely treatment

- Eilish O’Regan HEALTH CORRESPOND­ENT

ONE of the 11 patients who suffered delayed diagnosis due to a hospital’s X-ray and scan failures was unaware they had lung cancer for a year-anda-half.

The shocking revelation emerged yesterday in a report of a review of thousands of patient checks overseen by a locum radiologis­t in University Hospital Kerry. The patient is one of four who has since died.

The serious extent of the delay suffered by the patients whose cancer was not diagnosed is revealed for the first time.

They ranged from seven weeks in the case of another deceased patient who had a rectal tumour. Another patient died after their pancreatic cancer was not found for six weeks. A fourth patient died after a pelvic X-ray did not pick up that their cancer had spread to the bone.

The delay had serious effects on the health of all the patients, six of whom had lung cancer. The locum radiologis­t no longer works at the hospital.

The investigat­ion was called for in September 2017 after three patients were found to have cancer only after they came back to the hospital in July and August. They had got the all-clear weeks earlier.

Four more returned to the hospital in the autumn, complainin­g of ongoing symptoms. They were delivered the news they were victims of delayed diagnosis and had been given incorrect results.

ONE of the 11 patients who suffered delayed diagnosis due to a hospital’s X-ray and scan failures was unaware they had lung cancer for almost a yearand-a-half.

The shocking revelation emerged yesterday in a report of a review of thousands of patient checks overseen by a locum radiologis­t in University Hospital Kerry.

The patient is one of four who has since died.

The serious extent of the delay suffered by the patients whose cancer was not diagnosed is revealed for the first time.

They ranged from seven weeks in the case of another deceased patient who had a rectal tumour that was not found in a CT scan.

A third patient died after their pancreatic cancer was not found for six weeks.

The fourth patient also passed away after a pelvic X-ray did not pick up that their cancer spread to the bone.

The delay had serious effects on the health of all the patients, six of whom had lung cancer.

The locum radiologis­t no longer works at the hospital.

The investigat­ion was called for in September 2017 after three very ill patients were found to have cancer only after they came back to the hospital in July and August. They had got the all-clear weeks earlier.

Four more patients returned to the hospital in the autumn, complainin­g of ongoing symptoms. They were delivered the devastatin­g news that they were victims of delayed diagnosis and had been given incorrect results.

The look-back, which discovered three more cases of missed cancer, involved 46,234 images – CT scans, ultrasound scans and chest X-rays.

It found a substantia­l rate of unreported clinically significan­t findings requiring clinical review to determine if patients should be recalled for imaging.

In total, 1,789 radiology reports were reviewed against other clinical records to determine if the patient had appropriat­e follow-up care at the time of the original examinatio­n and if the patient required repeat imaging.

Some 422 patients were identified for recall. Following repeat imaging 59 patients required further clinical follow-up or investigat­ions and tens were referred to other hospitals for specialist care.

The review said the radiologis­t had a high volume of work. But there were earlier warning signs the doctor had overseen a number of ultrasound­s of poor technical quality. It said that, as in all parts of medicine, there were problems of human error. In radiology, the day-to-day rate could be between 3-5pc.

The report said it did not want to imply the harm done was exclusivel­y attributed to the individual radiologis­t and there were “many factors which influence an individual’s performanc­e”. It found a substantia­l rate of unreported clinically significan­t findings requiring clinical review to determine if patients should be recalled for imaging.

The doctor has since been referred to the Medical Council. The report has a series of recommenda­tions and an external review of the management of the hospital’s radiology department.

Clinical director Claire O’Brien and Dr Gerard O’Callaghan, chief operations officer of the South/South West Health Group, thanked the patients and families involved for their understand­ing.

 ??  ?? Gratitude: Dr Claire O’Brien of the South/ South West Health Group
Gratitude: Dr Claire O’Brien of the South/ South West Health Group

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