Irish Daily Mail

A ‘gut instinct’ is key to how GP can spot cancer

- By Eleanor Hayward

DOCTORS are better at diagnosing cancer if they trust their ‘gut feeling’ rather than relying on official symptoms, a key study has found.

Patients referred to hospital with suspected cancer after seeing a doctor were four times more likely to have the disease if their GP had acted on an instinct that something was wrong with them.

The Oxford University research found that the intuition of doctors, who pick up cues from observing a patient, was a better predictor than specific symptoms used in guidelines.

The study pooled data from 12 previous European studies covering 60,000 patients. Overall, when doctors referred a patient to a cancer specialist based on a ‘gut feeling’, the patient was more than four times as likely to be diagnosed with the disease than when no gut feeling was recorded.

This associatio­n increased the more experience­d a GP was and the better they knew the patient.

The study said gut feelings could be described as an ‘uneasy feeling’ or ‘intuition, alarm bells, worry, and suspicion’ that something was not right. It added: ‘Gut feelings were sometimes described as a physical sensation, a “lurch of your stomach” or “hairs on the back of your neck”, they were also often related to the patient being “unwell” rather than being specific to a cancer diagnosis.’

The findings show the value of personal consultati­ons and of seeing the same family doctor over several years, rather than a different GP over time.

They come when, due to Covid-19, it has become harder than ever to book an appointmen­t for a GP.

This will add to concerns that the shift to remote consultati­ons could lead to cancer symptoms being missed.

GP Brian Nicholson, a clinical lecturer at the University of Oxford and lead author of the study published in the British Journal of General Practice, said: ‘GPs can pick up a lot from the way a patient behaves. It could be that the patient is sitting uncomforta­bly, talking differentl­y, or the way they get up out of their chair in the waiting room. They are all subtle cues that you pick up while seeing a patient which form part of a bigger picture that could lead to a cancer referral. You learn a lot from getting to know a patient and their family over time. When you know what the patient’s “normal” is, it is easier to identify when something is different.

‘Overall this sends a message to GPs that they should feel confident to trust their gut feelings.’ The authors said their study supported efforts to document gut feelings so they can be incorporat­ed into clinical guidelines – and used in the training of GPs.

It could be an ‘uneasy feeling’ or ‘intuition’

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