TY - JOUR T1 - Electronic clinical decision support tool for assessing stomach symptoms in primary care (ECASS): a feasibility study JF - BMJ Open JO - BMJ Open DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-041795 VL - 11 IS - 3 SP - e041795 AU - Greg Rubin AU - Fiona M Walter AU - Jon Emery AU - Willie Hamilton AU - Zoe Hoare AU - Jenny Howse AU - Catherine Nixon AU - Tushar Srivastava AU - Chloe Thomas AU - Obioha C Ukoumunne AU - Juliet A Usher-Smith AU - Sophie Whyte AU - Richard D Neal Y1 - 2021/03/01 UR - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e041795.abstract N2 - Objective To determine the feasibility of a definitive trial in primary care of electronic clinical decision support (eCDS) for possible oesophago-gastric (O-G) cancer.Design and setting Feasibility study in 42 general practices in two regions of England, cluster randomised controlled trial design without blinding, nested qualitative and health economic evaluation.Participants Patients aged 55 years or older, presenting to their general practitioner (GP) with symptoms associated with O-G cancer. 530 patients (mean age 68 years, 58% female) participated.Intervention Practices randomised 1:1 to usual care (control) or to receive a previously piloted eCDS tool for suspected cancer (intervention), for use at the discretion of the GPs, supported by a theory-based implementation package and ongoing support. We conducted semistructured interviews with GPs in intervention practices. Recruitment lasted 22 months.Outcomes Patient participation rate, use of eCDS, referrals and route to diagnosis, O-G cancer diagnoses; acceptability to GPs; cost-effectiveness. Participants followed up 6 months after index encounter.Results From control and intervention practices, we screened 3841 and 1303 patients, respectively; 1189 and 434 were eligible, 392 and 138 consented to participate. Ten patients (1.9%) had O-G cancer. eCDS was used eight times in total by five unique users. GPs experienced interoperability problems between the eCDS tool and their clinical system and also found it did not fit with their workflow. Unexpected restrictions on software installation caused major problems with implementation.Conclusions The conduct of this study was hampered by technical limitations not evident during an earlier pilot of the eCDS tool, and by regulatory controls on software installation introduced by primary care trusts early in the study. This eCDS tool needed to integrate better with clinical workflow; even then, its use for suspected cancer may be infrequent. Any definitive trial of eCDS for cancer diagnosis should only proceed after addressing these constraints.Trial registration number ISRCTN125595588. ER -