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Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
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Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
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Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study

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Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study
Journal Article

Routes to Diagnosis in Lung Cancer—Do Socio-Demographics Matter? An English Population-Based Study

2025
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Overview
Objectives: Survival from lung cancer is worse in the UK than in some other countries, with late stage at diagnosis implicated in poor prognosis. The route and referral urgency by which patients obtain a diagnosis influence outcomes. This study investigated whether socio-demographic factors are associated with lung cancer routes to diagnosis in England. Materials and Methods: A total of 181,763 primary invasive lung cancers (ICD-10 C34.0-C34.9) diagnosed from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2016 were abstracted from the English National Cancer Registration Database. Multivariable logistic regression was used to examine associations between patients’ socio-demographic characteristics and likelihood (adjusted odds ratios) of (i) emergency presentation versus all primary care-initiated routes and (ii) urgent (“two-week wait”/2WW) versus standard primary care-initiated referral. Models included the following factors: deprivation quintile of area of residence at diagnosis (IMD income domain); sex; age; ethnic group; rural/urban residence; and (in the emergency model) region. Results: Socio-demographic variations in diagnosis routes were observed. Patients presenting as emergencies (35.2%) were more likely to be 80 years of age or older, female, of non-White ethnicity, and resident in areas of greater deprivation or the London region. In contrast, 2WW patients (28.3%) were more likely to be aged between 50 and 69 years old, of White ethnicity, and resident in an area of greater deprivation or resident outside of an urban centre; diagnosis through 2WW did not vary by sex. Conclusions: Routes to diagnosis are subject to distinct socio-demographic patterning. Action is needed to ensure that new referral guidelines and lung cancer screening roll-out do not widen socio-demographic inequalities in diagnosis.