Weekend Herald

Cancer treatment delays increasing risk for women

-

Some women with cancer of the reproducti­ve organs have experience­d waiting times far longer than the Government’s new target, putting them at risk of worse outcomes.

Only 39 per cent of Northland women with gynaecolog­ical cancers began treatment within the target of 62 days of their referral, according to an audit in yesterday’s NZ Medical Journal.

The target is that 85 per cent of cancer patients referred with high suspicion of cancer will start treatment within 62 days.

The national performanc­e on this target for all cancers was 74 per cent of patients in the April- June quarter, the latest data available. Northland was at 73 per cent.

Each year, nationally around 1000 women are newly diagnosed with a gynaecolog­ical cancer and around 400 women die from one of these diseases — around 10 per cent of all female cancer diagnoses and deaths.

In the journal paper, authors Catherine Askew and Anand Gangji say the average waiting time of patients in the audit for the 13 months to June 2015 was 111 days — with a maximum of 525 days — for those treated in Northland.

The authors suggested training GPs to better recognise potential signs of gynaecolog­ical cancers because few of the patients in the audit were at first flagged as “urgent — high suspicion of cancer”.

Auckland DHB’s director of cancer services, Dr Richard Sullivan, said performanc­e against the cancer target had increased rapidly since it was introduced earlier this year.

Performanc­e for gynaecolog­ical cancers had improved too, but was worse than for all cancers counted together, Sullivan said. He attributed this to the diversity of gynaecolog­ical cancers and their complexity.

Health Ministry acting chief medical officer Dr Andrew Simpson said the study provided a useful guide to Northland services about where they could best apply their efforts to improve their results.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand