학술논문

Effect of COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns on planned cancer surgery for 15 tumour types in 61 countries: an international, prospective, cohort study
Document Type
article
Author
Glasbey, JamesAdemuyiwa, AdesojiAdisa, AdewaleAlAmeer, EhabArnaud, Alexis PAyasra, FarisAzevedo, JoséMinaya-Bravo, AnaCostas-Chavarri, AinhoaEdwards, JohnElhadi, MuhammedFiore, MarcoFotopoulou, ChristinaGallo, GaetanoGhosh, DhruvaGriffiths, Ewen AHarrison, EwenHutchinson, PeterLawani, IsmailLawday, SamuelLederhuber, HansLeventoglu, SezaiLi, ElizabethGomes, Gustavo Mendonça AtaídeMann, HarvinderMarson, Ella JMartin, JanetMazingi, DennisMcLean, KennethModolo, MariaMoore, RachelMorton, DionNtirenganya, FaustinPata, FrancescoPicciochi, MariaPockney, Peterla Medina, Antonio Ramos-DeRoberts, KeithRoslani, April CamillaSeenivasagam, Rajkumar KottayasamyShaw, RichardSimões, Joana Filipa FerreiraSmart, NeilStewart, Grant DSullivan, RichardSundar, SudhaTabiri, StephenTaylor, Elliott HVidya, RaghavanNepogodiev, DmitriBhangu, AneelGlasbey, James CBhangu, Aneel ASiaw-Acheampong, KwabenaBenson, Ruth ABywater, EdwardChaudhry, DaoudDawson, Brett EEvans, Jonathan PGujjuri, Rohan RHeritage, EmilyJones, Conor SKamarajah, Sivesh KKhatri, ChetanKhaw, Rachel AKeatley, James MKnight, AndrewMann, Harvinder SMcLean, Kenneth AMckay, Siobhan CMills, Emily CPellino, GianlucaTiwari, AbhinavSimoes, Joana FFTrout, Isobel MVenn, Mary LWilkin, Richard JWSmart, Neil JMoug, SusanDi Saverio, SalomoneVallance, AbigailVimalchandran, Dale
Source
The Lancet Oncology. 22(11)
Subject
Digestive Diseases
Cancer
6.4 Surgery
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Aged
Aged
80 and over
COVID-19
Communicable Disease Control
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
Outcome Assessment
Health Care
Proportional Hazards Models
Prospective Studies
SARS-CoV-2
Time-to-Treatment
Withholding Treatment
COVIDSurg Collaborative
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Oncology & Carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
BackgroundSurgery is the main modality of cure for solid cancers and was prioritised to continue during COVID-19 outbreaks. This study aimed to identify immediate areas for system strengthening by comparing the delivery of elective cancer surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic in periods of lockdown versus light restriction.MethodsThis international, prospective, cohort study enrolled 20 006 adult (≥18 years) patients from 466 hospitals in 61 countries with 15 cancer types, who had a decision for curative surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic and were followed up until the point of surgery or cessation of follow-up (Aug 31, 2020). Average national Oxford COVID-19 Stringency Index scores were calculated to define the government response to COVID-19 for each patient for the period they awaited surgery, and classified into light restrictions (index 60). The primary outcome was the non-operation rate (defined as the proportion of patients who did not undergo planned surgery). Cox proportional-hazards regression models were used to explore the associations between lockdowns and non-operation. Intervals from diagnosis to surgery were compared across COVID-19 government response index groups. This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04384926.FindingsOf eligible patients awaiting surgery, 2003 (10·0%) of 20 006 did not receive surgery after a median follow-up of 23 weeks (IQR 16-30), all of whom had a COVID-19-related reason given for non-operation. Light restrictions were associated with a 0·6% non-operation rate (26 of 4521), moderate lockdowns with a 5·5% rate (201 of 3646; adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0·81, 95% CI 0·77-0·84; p