The Problem: Why Chinese Hospitals Sometimes Don't Respond

If you've ever submitted medical records to a Chinese hospital and waited days (or weeks) for a response — or worse, received no response at all — you're not alone. This is the #1 frustration we hear from international patients considering CAR-T therapy in China, TIL therapy, or other advanced treatments.

But here's what most patients don't realize: the delay is almost never the hospital's fault. In 91% of cases we analyzed, the delay was caused by incomplete, unclear, or improperly formatted medical records.

Chinese hospitals that work with international patients — like Ruijin Hospital in Shanghai, Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, and Peking University in Beijing — receive hundreds of inquiries monthly. Their international patient offices are efficient, but they can only respond quickly if the submission is complete and clear.

The Harsh Reality

Chinese hospitals prioritize submissions that are complete and easy to review. If your records are incomplete, they'll move to the next case. This isn't rudeness — it's triage. They have limited staff and hundreds of patients to evaluate.

What Is the 48-Hour Rule?

The 48-Hour Rule is a principle we've developed based on coordinating 312 cases in 2025: if you submit complete, properly formatted medical records, you should receive a preliminary response from a Chinese hospital within 48 hours.

This isn't a guarantee — some complex cases require tumor board review, which can take longer. But for straightforward eligibility assessments (Is this patient a candidate for CAR-T? Which trial might they qualify for?), 48 hours is the standard.

The rule works like this:

  • Hour 0-6: Your documents are received and logged by the hospital's international patient office
  • Hour 6-18: Records are translated (if needed) and forwarded to the relevant department (hematology, oncology, surgery)
  • Hour 18-36: An attending physician reviews the case, may consult with colleagues for complex cases
  • Hour 36-48: Response is drafted with preliminary assessment, recommended next steps, and cost estimate

If you don't receive a response within 48 hours, it's almost always because something was missing or unclear in your submission.

Real Data from 312 Cases in 2025

Let's look at the actual numbers. We analyzed every case we coordinated in 2025 — 312 patient submissions to Chinese hospitals for CAR-T, TIL, NK cell, and Gamma Delta T-cell therapies.

Response Time Analysis (312 Cases, 2025)
68%
responded within 48 hours
23%
responded in 48-72 hours
9%
took more than 72 hours
31h
average response (complete records)
86h
average response (incomplete records)
41%
of delays: missing English pathology

What Caused the Delays?

For the 32% of cases that took longer than 48 hours, we identified three main causes:

  1. Missing or non-English pathology reports (41% of delays) — The most common problem. Many patients submit pathology reports in their local language (Arabic, Russian, Turkish, etc.) without English translation. Chinese hospitals cannot review these.
  2. Imaging not in DICOM format (28% of delays) — Patients submit JPEG screenshots of CT scans or printed films. Chinese hospitals require the original DICOM files from the scanner.
  3. Unclear clinical summary (19% of delays) — The summary doesn't specify cancer type, stage, prior treatments, or current ECOG status. The hospital has to email back asking for clarification.
  4. Other (12%) — Illegible handwriting, missing lab results, incomplete contact information, etc.

The Cost of Delays

In aggressive cancers like glioblastoma or relapsed acute leukemia, every day matters. A 3-day delay in getting a response can mean the difference between enrolling in a clinical trial or missing the enrollment window. Don't let incomplete records cost you time.

The Complete Document Checklist

This is the exact checklist we use when preparing submissions for our patients. If you have all of these items, you'll get a fast response.

Required Documents for Fast Hospital Response
1. Pathology Report
Original pathology report with definitive diagnosis PDF
English translation (if original is in another language) by certified medical translator PDF
Immunohistochemistry (IHC) results — e.g., ER/PR/HER2 for breast cancer; PD-L1, MSI for others PDF
Molecular testing results if available — NGS panel, BRCA, EGFR, ALK, etc. PDF
2. Imaging Studies
Most recent CT/MRI/PET-CT (within last 4-6 weeks) in DICOM format DICOM
Radiology report in English, including measurements and staging PDF
All sequences — contrast + non-contrast if applicable, all phases for liver imaging
Prior imaging for comparison (if showing progression or response)
3. Clinical Summary (1 page, in English)
Patient demographics: Age, gender, country of residence
Primary diagnosis: Exact cancer type with pathology confirmation
Stage: TNM staging if applicable, or Ann Arbor for lymphoma
Prior treatments: List each (surgery, chemo, radiation, immunotherapy) with dates and response
Current status: ECOG performance status, recent lab values, current symptoms
Specific question: What are you asking? (e.g., "Eligibility for CAR-T", "Clinical trial enrollment")
4. Laboratory Results
Complete blood count (CBC) with differential PDF
Comprehensive metabolic panel — liver function, kidney function, electrolytes PDF
Reference ranges included (critical for international interpretation)
Tumor markers if applicable — CEA, CA-125, PSA, etc.
5. Hospital Discharge Summaries
Most recent hospitalization discharge summary in English PDF
Prior hospitalizations if relevant to current case
6. Patient Information
Full name (as on passport)
Date of birth
Contact email and phone number with country code
Passport copy (for visa processing later)

File Format Requirements

This is where most patients make mistakes. Chinese hospitals have specific format requirements, and if you don't follow them, your submission will be returned or delayed.

✅ Accepted Formats

  • PDF — for all text documents (pathology reports, clinical summaries, lab results, discharge summaries). Must be text-searchable, not scanned images.
  • DICOM — for all imaging studies (CT, MRI, PET-CT). This is the original digital format from the scanner. Usually provided on CD/DVD or via cloud transfer.
  • Word (.docx) — acceptable for clinical summary if you need to edit frequently, but PDF is preferred.

❌ NOT Accepted

  • JPEG/PNG screenshots of imaging — these lose critical diagnostic information
  • Printed films that have been photographed — same problem
  • Handwritten documents — must be typed and legible
  • Scanned images of text documents — must be text-searchable PDFs
  • Compressed archives (.zip, .rar) — some hospitals' email systems block these

How to Get DICOM Files

Request a "DICOM CD" or "DICOM export" from your imaging center. Most centers can provide this. If they offer cloud access (like Ambra, Nuance, or Philips), you can share a secure link. Do not accept JPEG screenshots — they are diagnostically useless for treatment planning.

How to Write the Clinical Summary

The clinical summary is the most important document in your submission. It's the first thing the physician reads, and it determines whether they can quickly assess your case or have to email back for clarification.

Here's a template that works. Copy this structure and fill in your details:

CLINICAL SUMMARY FOR INTERNATIONAL SECOND OPINION Patient Information: Name: [Full name as on passport] Age: [Age] Gender: [Male/Female] Country: [Country] Primary Diagnosis: [Exact cancer type, e.g., "Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma (DLBCL), germinal center B-cell subtype"] Date of diagnosis: [Month/Year] Pathology confirmation: [Biopsy date, hospital name] Stage: [Stage, e.g., "Stage IV Ann Arbor" or "T3N1M0"] Staging date: [Date of most recent staging scan] Prior Treatments: 1. [Treatment 1, e.g., "R-CHOP x 6 cycles, Jan-Mar 2025, partial response"] 2. [Treatment 2, e.g., "DHAP x 2 cycles, Apr-May 2025, progressive disease"] 3. [Treatment 3, if applicable] Current Status: ECOG Performance Status: [0-4] Recent labs (date): [Key values: WBC, Hgb, Plt, Creatinine, LFTs] Current symptoms: [Brief description] Most recent imaging (date): [Findings summary] Specific Question: [What are you asking? Be specific. Examples:] - "Eligibility for CAR-T therapy (CD19 or BCMA target)" - "Enrollment in clinical trial NCT12345678" - "Second opinion on treatment plan after 2 prior lines" Attached Documents: ☐ Pathology report (English) ☐ Imaging (DICOM format) ☐ Lab results ☐ Discharge summaries ☐ Passport copy

Key Tips for the Clinical Summary

  • Keep it to 1 page. Physicians are busy. If you can't summarize in 1 page, you're including too much detail.
  • Use bullet points. Dense paragraphs are hard to scan.
  • Be specific about prior treatments. Don't just say "chemotherapy" — say "R-CHOP x 6 cycles, Jan-Mar 2025, partial response."
  • Include ECOG status. This is critical for eligibility assessment. If you don't know it, ask your physician.
  • Ask a specific question. "Seeking best treatment" is too vague. "Eligibility for CAR-T after 2 prior lines" is clear.

7 Mistakes That Cause Delays

Based on our analysis of delayed cases, here are the most common mistakes — and how to avoid them:

Mistake #1: Submitting Pathology in Local Language

The problem: Pathology report is in Arabic, Russian, Turkish, etc. Chinese hospital cannot review it.

The fix: Get a certified English translation. Machine translation (Google Translate) is NOT acceptable — medical terminology must be accurate.

Mistake #2: Sending JPEG Screenshots of Imaging

The problem: Patient takes a photo of their CT scan on a lightbox or screenshots a web viewer. This loses critical diagnostic information.

The fix: Request DICOM files from your imaging center. This is the original digital format.

Mistake #3: Vague Clinical Summary

The problem: Summary says "patient has cancer, seeking treatment" without specifics.

The fix: Use the template above. Include exact diagnosis, stage, prior treatments with dates, ECOG status, and specific question.

Mistake #4: Missing Reference Ranges on Labs

The problem: Lab results show "Creatinine: 1.2" but no reference range. Chinese physicians don't know if this is normal or elevated in your country's units.

The fix: Ensure lab reports include reference ranges. If they don't, ask your lab to reissue with ranges.

Mistake #5: Handwritten Documents

The problem: Physician's notes are handwritten and illegible.

The fix: Request a typed summary from your physician. If that's not possible, have someone transcribe the notes.

Mistake #6: Incomplete Prior Treatment History

The problem: Summary says "prior chemotherapy" without details.

The fix: List each treatment: drug names, number of cycles, dates, response (complete/partial/progressive).

Mistake #7: No Clear Question

The problem: Patient wants "a second opinion" but doesn't specify what they want to know.

The fix: Be specific: "Eligibility for CAR-T after 2 prior lines" or "Enrollment in trial NCT12345678."

What Happens During Those 48 Hours

Here's the exact timeline of what happens after you submit complete records to a Chinese hospital:

The 48-Hour Review Process
Hour 0-6
Document Receipt & Logging

Your submission is received by the hospital's international patient office. Documents are logged, checked for completeness, and assigned a case number. If anything is missing, you'll be contacted immediately.

Hour 6-18
Translation & Department Routing

If any documents need translation (rare if you submitted in English), this happens now. Records are forwarded to the relevant department: hematology for blood cancers, oncology for solid tumors, surgery for surgical cases.

Hour 18-36
Physician Review

An attending physician reviews your case. For complex cases (rare cancers, multiple prior treatments, unusual presentations), they may consult with colleagues or present at tumor board.

Hour 36-48
Response Drafting

The physician drafts a response including: preliminary eligibility assessment, recommended next steps (additional tests, specific trial, treatment protocol), cost estimate, and timeline. This is reviewed by the international office for clarity.

Hour 48+
Response Sent

You receive the response via email. It typically includes a detailed assessment, recommended protocol, cost breakdown, and next steps. If additional information is needed, they'll specify exactly what's missing.

Pro tip: If you don't hear back within 48 hours, don't panic. But do follow up. Sometimes emails get filtered, or the physician is in surgery. A polite follow-up email after 72 hours is appropriate.

Download the Complete Checklist

Get a printable PDF version of this checklist to use when preparing your medical records submission.

Download PDF Checklist

Ready to Submit Your Case?

Our coordination team will review your documents for completeness before sending to Chinese hospitals — ensuring you get a fast response. This service is free, with no obligation.

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