The effect of COVID-19: Adopted changes and their impact on management of musculoskeletal oncology care at a tertiary referral centre.

Access Bone tumor COVID Delay Policy Sarcoma Teleconsultation Treatment

Journal

Journal of clinical orthopaedics and trauma
ISSN: 0976-5662
Titre abrégé: J Clin Orthop Trauma
Pays: India
ID NLM: 101559469

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Dec 2021
Historique:
received: 31 05 2021
revised: 17 09 2021
accepted: 12 10 2021
pubmed: 28 10 2021
medline: 28 10 2021
entrez: 27 10 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted access to healthcare. Delay in diagnosis and onset of care increases cancer related mortality. We aim to analyse its impact on patient profile, hospital visits, morbidity in surgically treated patients and process outcomes. We analysed an ambi-directional cohort from 16th March to June 30, 2020 (Pandemic cohort, PC) as compared to 2019 (Pre-pandemic cohort, PPC). We measured, new patient registrations, proportion of 'within state' patients vs 'rest of India', median time to treatment decision, proportion of patients seeking 'second opinions', modality of initial treatment (surgery/radiotherapy/chemotherapy), 30-day post-operative morbidity/mortality and conversion of inpatient-to 'teleconsult' in the PC. Between the 2 cohorts, new registrations declined from 235 to 69 (70% reduction). The percentage of 'within state' patients increased from 41.7% to 53.6% (11.9% increase). There was a decline in second opinion consults from 25% to 16%. The median time to decision-making decreased to 16 days in PC vs 20 days in PPC (20% reduction). Surgery was the first line of treatment in 40% as compared to 34% in the PPC with a mean time to surgery of 24 days in PC compared to 36 days in PPC (33% reduction). 66 surgeries were performed in the PC compared to 132 in the PPC. Thirty day post operative morbidity needing readmission remained similar (18% PC, vs 17% PPC). Perioperative intensive care remained similar in both cohorts. Teleconsultation was deemed medically safe in 92.8% (439/473 patients). The COVID 19 pandemic has substantially reduced access and onset to cancer care. Post operative morbidity and mortality did not seem to worsen with triage. Teleconsultation is an effective tool in optimizing follow up strategy.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted access to healthcare. Delay in diagnosis and onset of care increases cancer related mortality. We aim to analyse its impact on patient profile, hospital visits, morbidity in surgically treated patients and process outcomes.
METHODS METHODS
We analysed an ambi-directional cohort from 16th March to June 30, 2020 (Pandemic cohort, PC) as compared to 2019 (Pre-pandemic cohort, PPC). We measured, new patient registrations, proportion of 'within state' patients vs 'rest of India', median time to treatment decision, proportion of patients seeking 'second opinions', modality of initial treatment (surgery/radiotherapy/chemotherapy), 30-day post-operative morbidity/mortality and conversion of inpatient-to 'teleconsult' in the PC.
RESULTS RESULTS
Between the 2 cohorts, new registrations declined from 235 to 69 (70% reduction). The percentage of 'within state' patients increased from 41.7% to 53.6% (11.9% increase). There was a decline in second opinion consults from 25% to 16%. The median time to decision-making decreased to 16 days in PC vs 20 days in PPC (20% reduction). Surgery was the first line of treatment in 40% as compared to 34% in the PPC with a mean time to surgery of 24 days in PC compared to 36 days in PPC (33% reduction). 66 surgeries were performed in the PC compared to 132 in the PPC. Thirty day post operative morbidity needing readmission remained similar (18% PC, vs 17% PPC). Perioperative intensive care remained similar in both cohorts. Teleconsultation was deemed medically safe in 92.8% (439/473 patients).
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
The COVID 19 pandemic has substantially reduced access and onset to cancer care. Post operative morbidity and mortality did not seem to worsen with triage. Teleconsultation is an effective tool in optimizing follow up strategy.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34703161
doi: 10.1016/j.jcot.2021.101651
pii: S0976-5662(21)00535-X
pmc: PMC8531238
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

101651

Informations de copyright

© 2021.

Références

J Glob Health. 2020 Jun;10(1):010372
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pubmed: 32836364
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pubmed: 32986516

Auteurs

Ashwin Prajapati (A)

Bone and Soft Tissue Services, Dept of Surgical Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, and Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.

Srinath Gupta (S)

Bone and Soft Tissue Services, Dept of Surgical Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, and Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.

Prakash Nayak (P)

Bone and Soft Tissue Services, Dept of Surgical Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, and Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.

Ashish Gulia (A)

Bone and Soft Tissue Services, Dept of Surgical Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, and Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.

Ajay Puri (A)

Bone and Soft Tissue Services, Dept of Surgical Oncology, Tata Memorial Hospital, and Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI), Mumbai, India.

Classifications MeSH