Abstract

Background and aimLong-term changes in gastrointestinal function impacting quality of life after treatment for cancer are common. Peer reviewed guidance to investigate and manage GI dysfunction following cancer treatment has been published. This study reviewed gastrointestinal symptoms of women previously treated for gynaecological cancer and considered whether suggested algorithms could be amended to optimise management for this cohort.MethodsDemographic and clinical data recorded for patients attending a specialist consequences of cancer treatment gastroenterology service prospectively are reported using median and range. The Wilcoxon signed rank test analysed changes in symptoms between initial assessment to discharge from the service.ResultsBetween April 2013 and March 2016, 220 women, with a median age of 57 years (range 24–83 years), treated for gynaecological cancer (cervical (50%)), endometrial (28%), ovarian (15%), vaginal or vulval (7%) attended. Twelve gastrointestinal symptoms were statistically significantly reduced by time of discharge from the specialist gastroenterology clinic including bowel frequency ≥ 4/day (88%), type 6 or 7 stool consistency (36%), urgency (31%) and incontinence (21%). General quality of life improved from a median score of 4 at first assessment to a median of 6 at discharge (p < 0.001). A median of four (range, 1–9) diagnoses were made.ConclusionWomen with gastrointestinal symptoms after cancer treatment benefit from a systematic management approach. After excluding disease recurrence, a proposed investigational algorithm and the oncology team includes FBC, U&Es, LFTs, thyroid function test, vitamin B12, vitamin D, a hydrogen methane breath test and a SeHCAT scan. If rectal bleeding is present, iron studies, flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy should be performed. Patients with normal investigations or symptoms not responding to treatment require gastroenterology input.

Highlights

  • Background and aimLong-term changes in gastrointestinal function impacting quality of life after treatment for cancer are common

  • The Royal Marsden Gastrointestinal and Nutrition Team (GIANT) service, a clinic established to care for Support Care Cancer (2020) 28:4881–4889 patients experiencing ongoing gastrointestinal symptoms after cancer treatment, is multidisciplinary with input from a consultant gastroenterologist, specialist nurses and dietitians

  • The aims of this study were to evaluate the symptoms of women previously treated for gynaecological cancer, assessed in a specialist gastroenterology clinic and to review whether the established algorithm could be amended to optimise management in this cohort by the gynaecology team

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Summary

Introduction

Background and aimLong-term changes in gastrointestinal function impacting quality of life after treatment for cancer are common. The team developed a systematic, checklist-based approach to assess and investigate these long-term gastrointestinal symptoms, tested in the ORBIT study [4]. This showed that patient outcomes when managed by a specialist nurse were not inferior to those managed by a consultant gastroenterologist. Subsequent evaluation of this clinical service suggested that the cost of managing gastrointestinal consequences of cancer treatment across tumour groups averages £1563 per patient [5]

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