CommentaryBreast cancer: delays, dilemmas, and delusions
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Cited by (63)
Diagnostic delay and suboptimal management in persistent idiopathic facial pain and persistent dentoalveolar pain; a cross-sectional study
2019, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology and Oral RadiologyCitation Excerpt :Furthermore, inadequate knowledge and awareness among health care professionals about the various types and symptoms of facial pain, and referrals to the wrong type of specialists may be contributing to the diagnostic delay.21 There are 2 phases in diagnostic delay: (1) patient delay from the onset of symptoms to consultation with a health care professional, and (2) professional delay from the first consultation to definitive diagnosis.22 Our data suggest that diagnostic delay in PIFP is primarily caused by factors related to health care professionals in contrast to other oral diseases, such as oral cancer and immune-mediated blistering diseases, where patients-related delays contribute significantly to total diagnostic delay.23,24
Can we make a portrait of women with inoperable locally advanced breast cancer?
2017, BreastCitation Excerpt :Fifty-three percent of our patients waited <3 months to seek medical attention, but we did not find any biological difference between their tumors and those of women postponing medical visits. A possible explanation, as reported previously by other authors, is that the onset of symptoms may not be clearly definable as well as some patients may not admit they have delayed seeking treatment [15]. Consequently, the estimates of symptom duration might be affected by either false reporting or faulty recall [22].
Time-to-Surgery and Survival Outcomes in Resectable Colorectal Liver Metastases: A Multi-Institutional Evaluation
2016, Journal of the American College of SurgeonsIncreasing time delay from presentation until surgical referral for hepatobiliary malignancies
2010, HPBCitation Excerpt :Despite attempts to address inequalities in patient care it appears that there continues to be disparities in referral times by race. TD has been shown to be correlated with disease progression in several non-HB cancers as well as with HCC and pancreatic cancer in previous studies.3–11 While the present study did not show a significant difference in resectability with longer time delay (TD1), the biological nature of the HPB tumours studied would leave one to speculate that disease progression is inevitable with lengthy delays.