Claim against GPs for delayed diagnosis of lung cancer due to failure to investigate patient’s cough

Case Studies

Claim against GPs for delayed diagnosis of lung cancer due to failure to investigate patient’s cough


We settled a claim for our client, whose wife died after two GPs failed to investigate her ongoing cough which transpired to be due to the presence of a lung tumour.

The patient had been a heavy smoker but had given up the habit because of concerns about the risks and due to a family history of cancer.

She developed the cough in mid-March 2012. Initially, she thought that this would go away of its own accord but after two weeks when it remained, she arranged an appointment to see her GP who prescribed antibiotics. A few days later she returned to see her GP expressing concern. She was again reassured and told to complete the course of antibiotics. Over the next month she attended her GP practice on a further two occasions and requested a referral for investigation. She visited the practice again in May and despite having now had an ongoing cough for over two months, she was again reassured.

It was only when she reattended in July 2012 that a different GP took any action. However, he only arranged a sputum test, which was clear. No referral was made and he did not arrange a chest X-ray. In October 2012 the patient underwent a CT scan for an unrelated liver complaint. The scan imaged part of her lung and identified a lung lesion. Further investigation resulted in the diagnosis of a stage T3N0M0 moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma.

Despite surgery and chemotherapy it was not possible to cure the cancer due to its advanced stage and she died in August 2014.

Our clinical negligence team was instructed by the patient’s husband to investigate their joint concerns that she had not received appropriate care from her GPs and that the persistent cough should have been investigated. We obtained expert GP evidence which confirmed that the care provided in some of the consultations fell below an acceptable standard and amounted to a breach of duty of care. Specifically it was alleged that at the appointments at the end of April and in May 2012 the GP failed to act in accordance with the NICE guidelines. The patient’s cough had been present for approximately five and nine weeks at the respective appointments.

The experts also alleged that any responsible body of general practitioners would have made an urgent referral for a chest X-ray under the two week rule and that no responsible body would support the failure to refer for an X-ray at this time.

We then obtained expert evidence from an oncologist who looked at what would have happened following a referral in April or May 2012, as opposed to the incidental finding in October. Based on his evidence, it was alleged that onthe balance of probabilities, a diagnosis would have been made at a time when the tumour was smaller. Our client’s wife would still have required surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy but by starting treatment at an earlier stage, her life expectancy would have been extended by a number of months and her symptoms would have been much better managed.

A claim was brought for her estate under the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934 in respect of her personal injury, pain suffering, loss of amenity and loss of life expectancy. Another claim was made for our client, her husband, as a dependant under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976, covering loss of financial and services dependency and statutory bereavement damages.

We submitted letters of claim to the two GPs who were alleged to have provided inadequate care. The Medical Protection Society dealt with both claims and while no formal admissions of liability were made, it entered into negotiations to reach a settlement. 


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Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP

Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales with registered number OC311575 and is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority under number 419867.

Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP