The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence has published new guidance on the diagnosis and management of varicose veins in the legs.1 The guideline is short but is likely to mark a change in how varicose veins are managed in general practice, and makes recommendations on information for people with varicose veins, criteria for referral, and treatments and management in pregnancy. The guideline uses the Clinical Etiological Anatomical Pathophysiological (CEAP) classification of varicose veins (Box 1),2 which includes information on the clinical severity, aetiology, anatomical location, and pathophysiology of varicose veins and was originally intended for research purposes. Although accepted internationally and used in clinical practice it does have some limitations and is not used as the basis of referral criteria in the guideline. The Guideline Development Group agreed that it was more important for those referring to a vascular service to use clear, key clinical indicators and listen to the patient rather than trying to categorise people using CEAP.
CEAP classification
C0 — No visible or palpable signs of venous disease
C1 — Telangiectasias or reticular …