Paper

Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases (2004) 7, 118–121. doi:10.1038/sj.pcan.4500703

Computerised triage in a prostate assessment clinic

G N Rajkumar1, D R Small1 and I G Conn1

1Department of Urology, Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, UK

Correspondence: GN Rajkumar, Department of Urology, Southern General Hospital, 1345 Govan Road, Glasgow G51 4TF, UK. E-mail: radhraj@hotmail.com

Received 29 August 2003; Revised 24 October 2003; Accepted 12 November 2003.

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Abstract

An MS Office package has been developed to score IPSS, take a patient history, compare flows with nomograms and decide on interim management. This is based on these scores, residual volume and laboratory results. A clearly formatted GP letter is produced. The patient uses a touch screen to answer questions on the IPSS and other medical history. These questions and responses are stored in Excel spread sheets. Clinic staff then enter results of flow studies, urinalysis, U&E and PSA. Excel Visual Basic creates a detailed printout for the notes and the MS Office mail merge facility creates a summary printout, which also serves as a letter to the GP. Excel allows embedding of formulae and program code to implement the rules for management. Based on these rules, the program either generates a request for an urgent appointment in the clinic or recommends the use of either an alpha blocker (if not contraindicated by medical history) or 5 alpha reductase inhibitors in the interim period before they are reviewed in clinic. A total of 139 patients have been seen and the computer decisions compared with those of a consultant urologist. Agreement was found in 106, disagreement in 33. However, 21 of the 33 involved computer oversensitivity to flow results. We do not anticipate difficulty improving this and are investigating using an artificial neural network. Of the other 12 patients, the urologist departed from the fixed rules for IPSS, creatinine, PSA and residual urine when only one variable was slightly abnormal. To conclude, this novel user-friendly system shows great potential in the management of prostate outpatients. Some tuning is needed, with particular respect to uroflow results.

Keywords:

computerised triage, prostate assessment, clinic

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