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A Snapshot of Elective Oncological Surgery in Italy during COVID-19 Emergency: Pearls, Pitfalls, and Perspectives

  • Guido Torzilli
  • , Luca Viganò
  • , Jacopo Galvanin
  • , Carlo Castoro
  • , Vittorio Quagliuolo
  • , Antonino Spinelli
  • , Alessandro Zerbi
  • , Matteo Donadon
  • , Marco Montorsi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective:To analyze the impact of COVID-19 emergency on elective oncological surgical activity in Italy.Summary of Background Data:COVID-19 emergency shocked national health systems, subtracting resources from treatment of other diseases. Its impact on surgical oncology is still to elucidate.Methods:A 56-question survey regarding the oncological surgical activity in Italy during the COVID-19 emergency was sent to referral centers for hepato-bilio-pancreatic, colorectal, esophago-gastric, and sarcoma/soft-tissue tumors. The survey portrays the situation 5 weeks after the first case of secondary transmission in Italy.Results:In total, 54 surgical Units in 36 Hospitals completed the survey (95%). After COVID-19 emergency, 70% of Units had reduction of hospital beds (median -50%) and 76% of surgical activity (median -50%). The number of surgical procedures decreased: 3.8 (interquartile range 2.7-5.4) per week before the emergency versus 2.6 (22-4.4) after (P = 0.036). In Lombardy, the most involved district, the number decreased from 3.9 to 2 procedures per week. The time interval between multidisciplinary discussion and surgery more than doubled: 7 (6-10) versus 3 (3-4) weeks (P < 0.001). Two-third (n = 34) of departments had repeated multidisciplinary discussion of patients. The commonest criteria to prioritize surgery were tumor biology (80%), time interval from neoadjuvant therapy (61%), risk of becoming unresectable (57%), and tumor-related symptoms (52%). Oncological hub-and-spoke program was planned in 29 departments, but was active only in 10 (19%).Conclusions:This survey showed how surgical oncology suffered remarkable reduction of the activity resulting in doubled waiting-list. The oncological hub-and-spoke program did not work adequately. The reassessment of healthcare systems to better protect the oncological path seems a priority.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E112-E117
JournalAnnals of Surgery
Volume272
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Italy
  • emergency
  • surgery

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