Key Points
- Red flags screen for four main serious pathologies: malignancy, fracture, infection, and cauda equina syndrome (CES)
- CES is the most urgent: key features are saddle anaesthesia, bladder/bowel dysfunction, bilateral leg weakness, and loss of anal tone
- Serious pathology accounts for <1% of low back pain in primary care, but >80% of patients have at least one red flag, so clinical judgement and the overall picture matter
- Progressive neurological deficit in the lower limbs warrants urgent assessment regardless of other features
Red Flags by Serious Pathology
Cauda Equina Syndrome (urgent/emergency)
The most time-critical diagnosis. Five key features consistently described in the literature:
- Saddle anaesthesia (perineal/perianal numbness)
- Bladder dysfunction (urinary retention, overflow incontinence, loss of desire to void)
- Faecal incontinence or loss of anal sphincter tone
- Bilateral neurogenic sciatica
- Sexual dysfunction
Progressive bilateral lower limb weakness and widespread sensory deficit are also flags. Incomplete CES (reduced urinary sensation, poor stream without retention) still warrants urgent assessment.
Malignancy
- History of cancer (the single most diagnostically accurate red flag for spinal malignancy)
- Age >50 years
- Unexplained weight loss
- Pain at rest or worsening at night
- Failure to improve with treatment
Fracture
- Significant trauma (or minor trauma if >50 years, osteoporosis, or corticosteroid use)
- Older age, prolonged corticosteroid use, severe trauma, and presence of contusion/abrasion are the most informative red flags for fracture
Infection
- Fever
- IV drug use
- Immunosuppression (corticosteroids, HIV, transplant recipients)
- Recent bacterial infection
- Bone tenderness over lumbar spinous processes
Other
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm: absence of aggravating features, pulsatile abdominal mass
- Progressive neurological deficit: e.g. foot drop, worsening lower limb weakness
Important Caveats
- In an Australian primary care cohort (n = 1,172), <1% had serious pathology yet over 80% had at least one red flag, meaning most are false positives. A single isolated red flag (e.g. night pain alone) has poor diagnostic accuracy and should not automatically trigger imaging.
- Conversely, up to 64% of patients with spinal malignancy had no associated red flags, so a low threshold for further workup is appropriate when the clinical picture is concerning.
- Imaging should be reserved for suspected serious pathology, not routinely offered in the absence of red flags.
When to Act Urgently
Per NSW ACI and Victorian Department of Health guidance:
- ED immediately: suspected CES, spinal infection, rapidly progressive neurological deficit, suspected ruptured AAA, spinal fracture with neurological deficit
- GP review within 4 weeks: if radicular/sciatica pain is significant or not improving
See sources cited
- [PDF] Red flags presented in current low back pain guidelines: a review
- Acute low back pain | Emergency Care Institute
- [PDF] Beware the cauda equina - Medicine Today
- Re-evaluating Red Flags for Back Pain | Sports Medicine Section
- Diagnosis and management of low-back pain in primary care | CMAJ
- Progressive lower back pain | health.vic.gov.au
- IMTA - Spinal Red Flags
- [PDF] Diagnostic triage for low back pain - The Medical Journal of Australia
- [PDF] Low Back Pain Clinical Care Standard 2022
Evidence Validator
Heidi Clinical Team5 Contributions
Leolyn Günther
General Practice / Family Medicine•AU

