The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONVerdict Score 72

Most back pain is mechanical. A small percentage is something far more serious — here's how to tell.

Summary: Most back pain is completely ordinary — muscle, disc, or postural. But a small percentage hides something serious: a fracture, infection, cancer, or a spinal nerve emergency that can cause permanent paralysis if missed. The way physical therapists rule this out is through a specific set of

  1. What this actually is: Red flag screening is how physical therapists rule out serious underlying disease — fracture, cancer, infection, or a spinal nerve emergency — before treating what looks like ordinary back pain.
  2. The one thing that makes it worse: Relying on a single warning sign. Individual red flags are nearly useless in isolation — they only become clinically meaningful in combinations.
  3. Start here: Every physical therapist should ask every patient, every session: "Any changes in bladder or bowel control? Any numbness in the saddle area?" These two questions catch the most serious emergency.

Think of a red flag screening like a smoke detector. Most of the time it sits quietly and nothing happens. But ignoring a smoke alarm because the house has never burned before is exactly how houses burn down. The same applies to back pain — 85-90% is completely benign, but the 1-10% that isn't can leave someone paralysed, or worse, if you miss it.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Clinical Screening · General MSK

Red Flags in MSK Practice

How physical therapists separate ordinary back pain from genuine emergencies — and what happens when they don't.

All Body Regions MODERATE Evidence Safety-Critical

Red Flags — When to Stop and Refer

The following symptoms require escalation — not physiotherapy treatment. If your patient reports any of these, stop. Refer. Document.

Red flag clinical screening — urgent escalation criteria

🚨 EMERGENCY — Go to A&E Immediately

Emergency Cauda Equina Syndrome: New-onset saddle anesthesia (numbness in groin/genitals/saddle area), painless urinary retention, bilateral progressive motor weakness, fecal incontinence. Emergency MRI required within 4 hours. Surgical decompression ideally within 48h. Irreversible paralysis if missed.
Emergency Septic Arthritis: Rapid-onset hot, swollen, red joint with systemic fever. Hours to irreversible cartilage destruction. ER referral for joint aspiration.
Emergency Vascular Emergency: Suspected ruptured AAA (pulsatile abdominal mass), aortic dissection, or severe cervical artery dissection. Call 999.

⚠️ URGENT — Same-Day or Next-Day Referral

Urgent Spinal Infection: Fever + severe localized spinal pain + risk factors (IV drug use, immunosuppression, recent systemic infection).
Urgent Acute Myelopathy: New or rapidly progressive upper motor neuron signs — positive Hoffmann's or Babinski, clonus, hyperreflexia, spastic gait. STOP cervical manual therapy immediately.
Urgent Unstable Fracture: Severe trauma + neurological compromise or inability to weight bear. Especially with age >70, corticosteroid use, or known osteoporosis.

📋 SOON — 2-Week Urgent Referral

Soon Suspected Malignancy: Unexplained weight loss + unremitting night pain (unresponsive to positional change) + history of cancer or age >50 with ≥3 other malignancy flags. 2-week urgent oncology imaging.

The Takeaway — Do This Now

If you have back pain AND any new change in bladder or bowel control, OR any numbness in the saddle/groin area — go to the emergency department now. Do not wait for your next physio appointment.

For clinicians: Ask these two questions with every patient, every session. Not just at first appointment.

Plain English

Most back pain is completely benign — but a small percentage hides something that can leave you paralysed if missed.

The Analogy

Think of red flag screening like a smoke detector. It sits quietly 90% of the time and nothing happens. The problem isn't false alarms — it's the clinician who stops checking because it's been quiet for years. A spinal nerve emergency, a tumour pressing on the cord, a joint filling with bacteria — each of these looks exactly like ordinary back pain in the first few minutes of a clinical encounter. The difference is in two minutes of direct questioning that most clinicians rush past.

Three Things You Need to Know

1 What this actually is: Red flag screening is how physical therapists rule out serious underlying pathology — fracture, cancer, spinal infection, or a nerve emergency — before treating what looks like ordinary back pain.
2 The myth that won't die: Single red flags are nearly useless — a 50-year-old with night pain has maybe a 0.5% chance of spinal cancer. It's the combinations that matter: age + trauma + steroids, or bladder change + saddle numbness, that shift the probability enough to act on.
3 Start here: Every physical therapist should ask two questions at every session: "Any changes in bladder or bowel control?" and "Any numbness in the saddle area?" These two questions catch cauda equina syndrome — the most time-critical MSK emergency.

Best for

All adults presenting to physiotherapy, primary care, or sports medicine with any spinal or joint complaint. No patient is too healthy or too athletic for this screen.

Skip this protocol if

Symptoms are clearly mechanical (fully reproducible, positional, activity-linked) with no cluster of risk flags AND the patient has been recently screened. Even then — re-screen if clinical picture changes.

Want the full diagnostic framework and cluster evidence? Keep scrolling.

The Clinical Screening Framework

MSK red flag clinical screening — cluster-based reasoning framework

The IFOMPT 3-Step Protocol HIGH

The 2020 IFOMPT International Framework shifts the clinician from a binary checklist to a continuous clinical reasoning model. This is the current gold standard.

1

Determine Index of Suspicion

Synthesize the patient's health determinants — age, sex, BMI, prior cancer, osteoporosis, immunosuppression — with their cluster of reported symptoms to establish how worried you should be. Not "flag present/absent." A probability.

2

Decide Clinical Action

Low concern → manage conservatively. Moderate concern → watchful waiting with explicit safety-netting advice. High concern + clustered flags → immediate referral.

3

Choose the Right Pathway

Emergency Department (999/ER) for CES, septic arthritis, vascular emergencies. Urgent phone referral for infection and acute myelopathy. 2-week rule for malignancy. Standard referral for inflammatory arthritis.

Cluster-Based Diagnostic Rules MODERATE

Individual red flags perform poorly in isolation. These combinations dramatically improve diagnostic accuracy:

Cauda Equina

Bladder change + saddle anesthesia

Specificity 92% · +LR 3.46 (Premkumar 2018)

Spinal Fracture

Age >70 + Trauma + Corticosteroids

Specificity 100% (systematic review)

Cervical Myelopathy

Cook's Cluster ≥3 of 5

Specificity 99% · +LR 30.9 (Rhee et al. 2009)

Spinal Malignancy

Weight loss + Cancer history

+LR 10.25 (systematic review)

Cook's Myelopathy Cluster — 5 Elements

Test all 5. ≥3 positive = urgent neurological referral (Spec 99%, +LR 30.9). ≤1 positive = effectively rules out cervical myelopathy (-LR 0.18).

  1. Gait deviation (ataxic or spastic gait)
  2. Positive Hoffmann's sign
  3. Inverted supinator sign
  4. Positive Babinski sign
  5. Age >45 years

Mandatory History Questions

Ask directly. Do not rely on patients to volunteer these.

QuestionTarget PathologyWeight
"Any changes in bladder or bowel control? Difficulty starting urination or sensing when your bladder is full?"Cauda EquinaCRITICAL
"Any numbness or altered sensation in the groin, genitals, or saddle area?"Cauda EquinaCRITICAL
"Pain, numbness, or weakness in both legs simultaneously? Tripping or foot drop?"CES / Cord CompressionHIGH
"Ever been treated for cancer? Lost weight without trying? Pain at night that won't change with position?"MalignancyHIGH
"Recent fall or injury? Long-term steroids? Osteoporosis?"FractureMODERATE
"Fevers, chills, or night sweats? Recent infection elsewhere? IV drug use?"Spinal InfectionHIGH

Documentation — Medicolegal Non-Negotiables

Red flag screening creates legal exposure when done incorrectly. Per the CSP and GIRFT national guidelines (£186M NHS CES litigation over one decade):

  1. Document BOTH positive AND negative findings — "no CES symptoms" is legally insufficient. Record explicit denials: "Patient explicitly denies saddle anesthesia, urinary incontinence, bilateral leg symptoms."
  2. Record the exact timeline of symptom onset and any changes.
  3. Telephone referral for emergencies — written referral alone is legally inadequate for CES or acute myelopathy. Document name of person contacted, time, and agreed action.
  4. Safety-netting — document that explicit warning signs were given. Consider a written CES warning card.

What Doesn't Work

  • Relying on a single red flag (like "night pain" or "age over 50") to trigger referral — generates excessive false positives and imaging overutilization
  • Digital rectal examination (DRE) as the primary CES screening tool — high operator variability, poor predictive value; patient-reported bladder symptoms + PVR >200mL are more reliable
  • Written referral alone for CES or acute myelopathy — verbal telephone communication with the receiving team is mandatory
  • Single-session screening — re-screen at every session if the clinical picture changes

Conviction

MODERATE Overall evidence confidence

The IFOMPT 2020 framework is the highest-tier systematic approach available, but the underlying evidence base has important limitations. Most diagnostic accuracy data derives from secondary care or emergency department populations — not the primary care and physiotherapy settings where most screening decisions happen. Individual red flag sensitivity/specificity data are frequently DATA UNAVAILABLE because serious pathologies are too rare in outpatient settings for adequately powered studies.

What would change this protocol

A large-scale (N>10,000), multi-center, prospective cohort study in primary care and first-contact physiotherapy settings with mandatory systematic red flag documentation at initial evaluation and 2-year longitudinal EHR follow-up tracking all patients for missed diagnoses. This is the only design that can establish definitive sensitivity/specificity for cluster-based screening rules in the populations where physiotherapists actually practice.

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Key References

IFOMPT International Framework for Red Flags for Potential Serious Spinal Pathologies, 2020 — Highest-tier systematic framework; cluster-based clinical reasoning standard

Systematic Framework | Tier 1 — Clinical Practice Standard

Albert et al. 2023, BMJ Open — Meta-analysis, red flags for vertebral fracture in LBP; cluster combinations +LR 4.35-16.17; individual flags poor diagnostic utility

Meta-Analysis | Tier 2

Cook et al. / Rhee et al. 2009 — Cook's Myelopathy Cluster (5-element battery); ≥3 positive: Spec 99%, +LR 30.9; ≤1 positive: -LR 0.18

Diagnostic Accuracy Study | Tier 3

Premkumar et al. 2018 — CES screening: bladder/bowel + saddle anesthesia combination specificity 92%, +LR 3.46; PVR >200mL sensitivity 94.1%

Diagnostic Cohort | Tier 3

GIRFT National CES Guidelines (gettingitrightfirsttime.co.uk) — Medicolegal documentation standards; £186M NHS litigation costs; telephone referral requirements

National Clinical Standard | Tier 1

CSP — Chartered Society of Physiotherapy — Professional documentation standards and red flag escalation protocols

Professional Guidelines | Tier 1

Albert et al. 2019, Spine Journal — Guideline-endorsed red flags to screen for fracture; evaluation of individual flag performance

Systematic Review | Tier 2

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

72 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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