Tumor Tips

Tumor Tip of the Week 03-22-2024 Definitive Statement of Diagnosis

03-22-2024 Definitive Statement of Diagnosis

Scenario:

  • 3/1/2024 CT Abdomen/Pelvis-8 cm solid mass in the right kidney with renal vein invasion. Multiple osseous

metastases of the spine and pelvis including a large paraspinal/vertebral metastasis centered at T10.

  • 3/2/2024 Med Onc Consult: 68 yo M with kidney mass and osseous lesions most likely renal primary
  • 3/3/2024 thoracic tumor resection-Metastatic Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma w/ bone invasion
  • 3/5/2024 -03/19/2024 Palliative T-spine 300 x 10 fxs total 3000 cGy

Question:  What is the date of diagnosis?

  • 3/1/2024-Date of Scan that states Multiple osseous metastases of the spine and pelvis
  • 3/2/2024 Date Physician used ambiguous terminology that constitutes a diagnosis “Most Likely Renal Primary”
  • 3/3/2024 Date of positive biopsy

Answer:  3/1/2024

Rationale: Sometimes we see abstractors choose the date of diagnosis when one of those ambiguous terms is used, but you must be careful.  On 3-1-2024 the scan states the patient has metastatic disease, that is not ambiguous, it is a definitive statement.  So, you don’t have to refer to that “Ambiguous Terms” section in the manuals, you would use the date of 3-1-2024 as the date of diagnosis when the patient was clinically established to have metastatic disease.

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