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Collateral damage of COVID-19 pandemic: The impact on a gynecologic surgery department - 29/10/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.jogoh.2021.102255 
Jeanne PIKETTY, Marie CARBONNEL , Rouba MURTADA, Aurélie REVAUX, Jennifer ASMAR, Angéline FAVRE-INHOFER, Jean-Marc AYOUBI
 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hospital Foch, 40, rue Worth, Suresnes, 92150 and University of Versailles, Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, 55, avenue de Paris, 78000 Versailles, France. 

Corresponding author: Marie Carbonnel, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Hospital Foch, SuresnesDepartment of Obstetrics and GynecologyHospital Foch, Suresnes

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Highlights

The COVID-19 pandemic was the cause of a significant decrease (65%) of surgical activity during the first French lockdown.
It was difficult to reschedule procedures, which resulted in delay of patients in semi-urgent operations beyond the interval recommended by guidelines and potential medical risk for approximately 10% of postponed surgeries.

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ABSTRACT

Objective

This study focuses on changes in gynecologic surgical activity at Hospital Foch, Paris, France during the first French COVID lockdown in 2020. Additional goals include the evaluation the extent of the postponement suffered for each type of surgery and estimate the possible negative impact for patients.

Study design

Single-center, retrospective, chart-review cohort study in the gynecology department of Hospital Foch. Comparison of all patients scheduled, postponed and operated during the first COVID lockdown (March 14, to May 11, 2020) versus the same period in 2019. Postponed surgeries were classified into 4 scheduling interval categories according to the Society of Gynecology Oncology (SGO) recommendations: urgent (without delay), semi-urgent (1-4 weeks), non-urgent (>4-12 weeks) and elective (>3 months) and evaluated to determine whether COVID-19-related delays of surgeries fell within guidelines. The potential “loss of chance” or medical risk associated with postponed surgeries was estimated according to a composite criterion including death, aggravation of expected tumor stages/grades in cancers, increase in surgical complexity compared to that initially planned, need for preoperative transfusions, start of morphine consumption during preoperative treatment for opiate-naive patients, additional hospitalization or consultations in emergency room and delay in treatment when surgery was urgent.

Results

During the 2020 French COVID lockdown, 61 patients had a surgical procedure and 114 were postponed; in the comparator 2019 group, 232 patients underwent surgical procedures, indicating an overall decrease of 65% of activity. Analysis of differences between the two years revealed a reduction of 64% in emergency procedures, 90% of functional pathologies, and 13% of cancers. According to SGO guidelines, the only type of surgical procedures that had excessive delay was the semi-urgent group, where time to surgery was 6.7 weeks [range 5.4-10 weeks] instead of the recommended interval of 1-4 weeks. Among postponed surgeries there were 10 patients (8.7%) with a potential “loss of chance” according to the composite criteria, all included in the semi-urgent group.

Conclusion

The COVID 19 pandemic was responsible for a significant decrease of activity in the surgical department of Hospital Foch. Difficulty of rescheduling surgeries was responsible for an increased delay in semi-urgent operations. In almost 9% of postponed surgeries, there was a potential “loss of chance”, which likely represents only the tip of iceberg of collateral damages due to COVID 19 pandemic in this surgical unit. These data show the importance of continuing to treat pathologies requiring urgent or semi-urgent surgery during pandemics.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

KEYWORDS : COVID-19, delayed surgery, gynecology, loss of chance, medical risk, surgical procedures


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 Declaration of Competing Interest
 The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.


© 2021  Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS.
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