Cargando…

A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer

BACKGROUND: Bowel cancer is common and is a major cause of death. Most people with bowel symptoms who meet the criteria for urgent referral to secondary care will not be found to have bowel cancer, and some people who are found to have cancer will have been referred routinely rather than urgently. I...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ryan, Angela V, Wilson, Sue, Wakelam, Michael JO, Warmington, Sally A, Dunn, Janet A, Hobbs, Richard FD, Martin, Ashley, Ismail, Tariq
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1635060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17059590
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-251
_version_ 1782130666162356224
author Ryan, Angela V
Wilson, Sue
Wakelam, Michael JO
Warmington, Sally A
Dunn, Janet A
Hobbs, Richard FD
Martin, Ashley
Ismail, Tariq
author_facet Ryan, Angela V
Wilson, Sue
Wakelam, Michael JO
Warmington, Sally A
Dunn, Janet A
Hobbs, Richard FD
Martin, Ashley
Ismail, Tariq
author_sort Ryan, Angela V
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Bowel cancer is common and is a major cause of death. Most people with bowel symptoms who meet the criteria for urgent referral to secondary care will not be found to have bowel cancer, and some people who are found to have cancer will have been referred routinely rather than urgently. If general practitioners could better identify people who were likely to have bowel cancer or conditions that may lead to bowel cancer, the pressure on hospital clinics may be reduced, enabling these patients to be seen more quickly. Increased levels of an enzyme called matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) have been found to be associated with such conditions, and this can be measured from a blood sample. This study aims to find out whether measuring MMP-9 levels could improve the appropriateness of urgent referrals for patients with bowel symptoms. METHODS: People aged 18 years or older referred to a colorectal clinic will be asked to complete a questionnaire about symptoms, recent injuries or chronic illnesses (these can increase the level of matrix metalloproteinases) and family history of bowel cancer. A blood sample will be taken from people who consent to take part to assess MMP-9 levels, and the results of examination at the clinic and/or investigations arising from the clinic visit will be collected from hospital records. The accuracy of MMP-9 will be assessed by comparing the MMP-9 level with the resulting diagnosis. The combination of factors (e.g. symptoms and MMP-9 level) that best predict a diagnosis of malignancy (invasive disease or polyps) will be determined. DISCUSSION: Although guidelines are in place to facilitate referrals to colorectal clinics, symptoms alone do not adequately distinguish people with malignancy from people with benign conditions. This study will establish whether MMP-9 could assist this process. If this were the case, measurement of MMP-9 levels could be used by general practitioners to assist in the identification of people who were most likely to have bowel cancer or conditions that may lead to bowel cancer, and who should, therefore, be referred most urgently to secondary care.
format Text
id pubmed-1635060
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-16350602006-11-08 A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer Ryan, Angela V Wilson, Sue Wakelam, Michael JO Warmington, Sally A Dunn, Janet A Hobbs, Richard FD Martin, Ashley Ismail, Tariq BMC Cancer Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Bowel cancer is common and is a major cause of death. Most people with bowel symptoms who meet the criteria for urgent referral to secondary care will not be found to have bowel cancer, and some people who are found to have cancer will have been referred routinely rather than urgently. If general practitioners could better identify people who were likely to have bowel cancer or conditions that may lead to bowel cancer, the pressure on hospital clinics may be reduced, enabling these patients to be seen more quickly. Increased levels of an enzyme called matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) have been found to be associated with such conditions, and this can be measured from a blood sample. This study aims to find out whether measuring MMP-9 levels could improve the appropriateness of urgent referrals for patients with bowel symptoms. METHODS: People aged 18 years or older referred to a colorectal clinic will be asked to complete a questionnaire about symptoms, recent injuries or chronic illnesses (these can increase the level of matrix metalloproteinases) and family history of bowel cancer. A blood sample will be taken from people who consent to take part to assess MMP-9 levels, and the results of examination at the clinic and/or investigations arising from the clinic visit will be collected from hospital records. The accuracy of MMP-9 will be assessed by comparing the MMP-9 level with the resulting diagnosis. The combination of factors (e.g. symptoms and MMP-9 level) that best predict a diagnosis of malignancy (invasive disease or polyps) will be determined. DISCUSSION: Although guidelines are in place to facilitate referrals to colorectal clinics, symptoms alone do not adequately distinguish people with malignancy from people with benign conditions. This study will establish whether MMP-9 could assist this process. If this were the case, measurement of MMP-9 levels could be used by general practitioners to assist in the identification of people who were most likely to have bowel cancer or conditions that may lead to bowel cancer, and who should, therefore, be referred most urgently to secondary care. BioMed Central 2006-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC1635060/ /pubmed/17059590 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-251 Text en Copyright © 2006 Ryan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Ryan, Angela V
Wilson, Sue
Wakelam, Michael JO
Warmington, Sally A
Dunn, Janet A
Hobbs, Richard FD
Martin, Ashley
Ismail, Tariq
A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title_full A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title_fullStr A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title_full_unstemmed A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title_short A prospective study to assess the value of MMP-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
title_sort prospective study to assess the value of mmp-9 in improving the appropriateness of urgent referrals for colorectal cancer
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1635060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17059590
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-6-251
work_keys_str_mv AT ryanangelav aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT wilsonsue aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT wakelammichaeljo aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT warmingtonsallya aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT dunnjaneta aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT hobbsrichardfd aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT martinashley aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT ismailtariq aprospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT ryanangelav prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT wilsonsue prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT wakelammichaeljo prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT warmingtonsallya prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT dunnjaneta prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT hobbsrichardfd prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT martinashley prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer
AT ismailtariq prospectivestudytoassessthevalueofmmp9inimprovingtheappropriatenessofurgentreferralsforcolorectalcancer