The impact of delayed reporting on forensic evidence recovery in anal sexual assault cases: A retrospective study


Kartal E., Etli Y., Korkmaz B.

PLOS ONE, cilt.21, sa.3 March, 2026 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus) identifier identifier

  • Yayın Türü: Makale / Tam Makale
  • Cilt numarası: 21 Sayı: 3 March
  • Basım Tarihi: 2026
  • Doi Numarası: 10.1371/journal.pone.0343686
  • Dergi Adı: PLOS ONE
  • Derginin Tarandığı İndeksler: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED), Scopus, BIOSIS, Chemical Abstracts Core, EMBASE, Index Islamicus, Linguistic Bibliography, MEDLINE, Psycinfo, zbMATH, Directory of Open Access Journals
  • Van Yüzüncü Yıl Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

Background Delayed presentation after sexual assault reduces the probability of detecting injuries or recovering biological evidence. Evidence specific to anal-route allegations and physical findings is comparatively limited. Methods We retrospectively reviewed 222 consecutive cases alleging anal-route sexual assault seen at a university forensic clinic in Türkiye (2010–2014). Examinations included standardized external anogenital inspection under magnification (colposcopy) and full-body assessment; anoscopy was not routinely available. The primary outcome was acute physical findings (composite of anal/perianal and, when present, parallel genital injuries, plus extragenital traumatic lesions). Bivariate associations used Pearson’s χ2 (with df reported; Monte Carlo where appropriate). As a prespecified sensitivity analysis, a Random Forest classifier was trained using pre-examination demographics and incident-context variables with stratified 5-fold cross-validation, reporting ROC AUC, PR-AUC, accuracy, Brier score, and permutation feature importance. Results Most victims were female (69.4%) and <18 years (60.8%). The probability of detecting acute findings was higher with earlier examination (e.g., ≤ 7 days vs. later: OR 6.13, χ2 = 88.36, p < 0.001). The Random Forest showed moderate discrimination (CV ROC AUC 0.781 ± 0.077; PR-AUC 0.604 ± 0.119; accuracy 0.739 ± 0.079), with out-of-fold ROC AUC 0.762 (bootstrap 95% CI 0.692–0.827) and Brier 0.186. Assault-to-examination interval was the dominant contributor by permutation importance (group share 43.3%), followed by age metrics, prior anal intercourse count, and contextual factors. Findings were directionally similar when the outcome was any physical finding (genital or extragenital). Conclusions Earlier examination markedly increases the likelihood of detecting physical findings in alleged anal sexual assaults. Negative examinations after delays are forensically compatible with the allegation and should be documented with precise timelines and standardized magnified imaging. Streamlined, trauma-informed pathways to facilitate timely reporting may improve evidentiary outcomes and reduce secondary victimization.