TY - JOUR T1 - Risk prediction models for symptomatic patients with bladder and kidney cancer: a systematic review JF - British Journal of General Practice JO - Br J Gen Pract SP - e11 LP - e18 DO - 10.3399/BJGP.2021.0319 VL - 72 IS - 714 AU - Hannah Harrison AU - Juliet A Usher-Smith AU - Lanxin Li AU - Lydia Roberts AU - Zhiyuan Lin AU - Rachel E Thompson AU - Sabrina H Rossi AU - Grant D Stewart AU - Fiona M Walter AU - Simon Griffin AU - Yin Zhou Y1 - 2022/01/01 UR - http://bjgp.org/content/72/714/e11.abstract N2 - Background Timely diagnosis of bladder and kidney cancer is key to improving clinical outcomes. Given the challenges of early diagnosis, models incorporating clinical symptoms and signs may be helpful to primary care clinicians when triaging at-risk patients.Aim To identify and compare published models that use clinical signs and symptoms to predict the risk of undiagnosed prevalent bladder or kidney cancer.Design and setting Systematic review.Method A search identified primary research reporting or validating models predicting the risk of bladder or kidney cancer in MEDLINE and EMBASE. After screening identified studies for inclusion, data were extracted onto a standardised form. The risk models were classified using TRIPOD guidelines and evaluated using the PROBAST assessment tool.Results The search identified 20 661 articles. Twenty studies (29 models) were identified through screening. All the models included haematuria (visible, non-visible, or unspecified), and seven included additional signs and symptoms (such as abdominal pain). The models combined clinical features with other factors (including demographic factors and urinary biomarkers) to predict the risk of undiagnosed prevalent cancer. Several models (n = 13) with good discrimination (area under the receiver operating curve >0.8) were identified; however, only eight had been externally validated. All of the studies had either high or unclear risk of bias.Conclusion Models were identified that could be used in primary care to guide referrals, with potential to identify lower-risk patients with visible haematuria and to stratify individuals who present with non-visible haematuria. However, before application in general practice, external validations in appropriate populations are required. ER -