Outcomes of gynecologic cancer surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic: an international, multicenter, prospective CovidSurg-Gynecologic Oncology Cancer study

Background: The CovidSurg-Cancer Consortium aimed to explore the impact of COVID-19 in surgical patients and services for solid cancers at the start of the pandemic. The CovidSurg-Gynecologic Oncology Cancer subgroup was particularly concerned about the magnitude of adverse outcomes caused by the di...

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Autores: Fotopoulou, C. (C.)|||/items/3d219a80-54e5-4098-bddf-3744c4ff74d3, Khan, T. (Tabassum)|||/items/c45ab669-cd91-47b9-93d4-b7aea6a1ab08, Bracinik, J. (Juraj)|||/items/b7420396-a6c6-4d6d-947d-074fec6ee09a, Glasbey, J. (James)|||/items/2ae23c2f-d97d-4eff-a5f1-5cb677006e3b, Abu-Rustum, N. (Nadeem)|||/items/39a35580-1421-428c-81df-f98aea62f14a, Chiva-de-Agustín, L. (Luis)|||/items/5aab5671-f48d-4295-8ae0-c8c88221e1f1, Fagotti, A. (Anna)|||/items/34ec2d75-c257-49f8-9359-4dcb6021f29d, Fujiwara, K. (Keiichi)|||/items/c7d299b7-70bb-4139-bf22-87270ac66622, Ghebre, R. (Rahel)|||/items/ad29aec7-f49c-41fb-9fb5-07f2e791cfba, Gutelkin, M. (Murat)|||/items/a01e26eb-c91e-448e-bce4-363eaa7ab223, O Konney, T. (Thomas)|||/items/6278193b-dbaa-4540-b6bc-28c2d069d982, Ng, J. (Joseph)|||/items/efb39870-f168-4fd8-80b9-b37f86cf4eb1, Pareja, R. (Rene)|||/items/b01c7cba-1060-4e8b-b2e7-359b2ba6a26a, Kottayasamy-Seenivasagam, R. (Rajkumar)|||/items/b2afd13d-8361-4781-b172-f95b4d5c1f1d, Sehouli, J. (J.)|||/items/e0fe4fa6-a047-4b7c-8eb9-dbe14fbc5c00, Surappa, S.T.S. (Shylasree T.S.)|||/items/8c7c0d4a-156b-4c77-8bed-f68b4fe05a59, Bhangu, A. (Aneel)|||/items/96206f4c-6113-4155-a139-168fc23436f7, Leung, E. (Elaine)|||/items/ef7676a5-55e5-4899-a3fe-17e14ad7250f, Sundar, S. (Sudha)|||/items/85d257aa-d5b5-4689-82b5-54f577f0823d
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2022
País:España
Institución:Universidad de Navarra
Repositorio:Dadun. Depósito Académico Digital de la Universidad de Navarra
Idioma:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171/123961
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10171/123961
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:COVID-19
Complications
Delay
Gynecologic cancer
Pandemic
Surgery
Descripción
Sumario:Background: The CovidSurg-Cancer Consortium aimed to explore the impact of COVID-19 in surgical patients and services for solid cancers at the start of the pandemic. The CovidSurg-Gynecologic Oncology Cancer subgroup was particularly concerned about the magnitude of adverse outcomes caused by the disrupted surgical gynecologic cancer care during the COVID-19 pandemic, which are currently unclear. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the changes in care and short-term outcomes of surgical patients with gynecologic cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic. We hypothesized that the COVID-19 pandemic had led to a delay in surgical cancer care, especially in patients who required more extensive surgery, and such delay had an impact on cancer outcomes. Study design: This was a multicenter, international, prospective cohort study. Consecutive patients with gynecologic cancers who were initially planned for nonpalliative surgery, were recruited from the date of first COVID-19-related admission in each participating center for 3 months. The follow-up period was 3 months from the time of the multidisciplinary tumor board decision to operate. The primary outcome of this analysis is the incidence of pandemic-related changes in care. The secondary outcomes included 30-day perioperative mortality and morbidity and a composite outcome of unresectable disease or disease progression, emergency surgery, and death. Results: We included 3973 patients (3784 operated and 189 nonoperated) from 227 centers in 52 countries and 7 world regions who were initially planned to have cancer surgery. In 20.7% (823/3973) of the patients, the standard of care was adjusted. A significant delay (>8 weeks) was observed in 11.2% (424/3784) of patients, particularly in those with ovarian cancer (213/1355; 15.7%; P<.0001). This delay was associated with a composite of adverse outcomes, including disease progression and death (95/424; 22.4% vs 601/3360; 17.9%; P=.024) compared with those who had operations within 8 weeks of tumor board decisions. One in 13 (189/2430; 7.9%) did not receive their planned operations, in whom 1 in 20 (5/189; 2.7%) died and 1 in 5 (34/189; 18%) experienced disease progression or death within 3 months of multidisciplinary team board decision for surgery. Only 22 of the 3778 surgical patients (0.6%) acquired perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infections; they had a longer postoperative stay (median 8.5 vs 4 days; P<.0001), higher predefined surgical morbidity (14/22; 63.6% vs 717/3762; 19.1%; P<.0001) and mortality (4/22; 18.2% vs 26/3762; 0.7%; P<.0001) rates than the uninfected cohort. Conclusion: One in 5 surgical patients with gynecologic cancer worldwide experienced management modifications during the COVID-19 pandemic. Significant adverse outcomes were observed in those with delayed or cancelled operations, and coordinated mitigating strategies are urgently needed.