Metelmann Isabella B, Busemann Alexandra
Department of Visceral, Transplant, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, University Hospital of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Department of General, Visceral, Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, Universitätsmedizin, University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
Z Evid Fortbild Qual Gesundhwes. 2020 Dec;158-159:62-65. doi: 10.1016/j.zefq.2020.10.003. Epub 2020 Oct 19.
COVID-19 had an impact on the whole range of worldwide medical services. Due to the high risk of in-hospital transmission and disproportionate perioperative rates of morbidity and mortality in occult COVID-19 patients surgeons were faced with the challenging triage of surgeries into emergency, urgent and elective. The present study investigates postponed elective surgery and its impact on the medical condition of patients in two high-volume departments of general, visceral, thoracic, transplant and vascular surgery.
Operations that have been postponed due to COVID-19 were recorded in the Departments of General-, Visceral-, Thoracic- and Vascular Surgery at the University Hospitals of Leipzig and Greifs-wald. Data was analysed descriptively concerning patient outcomes as well as emergency admissions and surgeries.
In the Leipzig and Greifswald University Hospitals 89 and 92 elective surgeries were postponed, respectively. No patient needed an extension of surgical procedure when eventually operated. One patient with extensive obesity died early during the suspension period due to cardiac complications. Four patients needed emergency admission to hospital one of whom required urgent surgery. In neither of the two surgical departments did a patient acquire a nosocomial infection with COVID-19.
While medical consequences of COVID-19 seem multidimensional and severe, our data indicate that the short-term postponement of elective surgery did not cause an unproportional increase of morbidity and mortality. Although the restrictions may have been fear-driven, given no confirmed cases and thus no concrete risk of infection, the early and well-coordinated action may have provided protection from uncontrolled interruption of medical services by loss of medical workforce or capacity.
Well-organized and early suspension of elective surgery had no disproportionate impact on patient outcomes while averting nosocomial transmission of COVID-19.
新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)对全球范围内的各类医疗服务都产生了影响。由于医院内传播风险高,以及隐匿性COVID-19患者围手术期发病率和死亡率不成比例,外科医生面临着将手术分为急诊、 urgent和择期的具有挑战性的分诊工作。本研究调查了两个高容量的普通外科、内脏外科、胸外科、移植外科和血管外科科室中推迟的择期手术及其对患者病情的影响。
在莱比锡和格赖夫斯瓦尔德大学医院的普通外科、内脏外科、胸外科和血管外科记录因COVID-19而推迟的手术。对患者结局以及急诊入院和手术的数据进行描述性分析。
在莱比锡和格赖夫斯瓦尔德大学医院,分别有89例和92例择期手术被推迟。最终手术时,没有患者需要延长手术程序。一名重度肥胖患者在暂停期早期因心脏并发症死亡。四名患者需要紧急入院,其中一名需要紧急手术。在这两个外科科室中,没有患者感染COVID-19医院获得性感染。
虽然COVID-19的医学后果似乎是多方面且严重的,但我们的数据表明,择期手术的短期推迟并未导致发病率和死亡率不成比例的增加。尽管这些限制可能是由恐惧驱动的,但由于没有确诊病例,因此没有具体的感染风险,早期且协调良好的行动可能提供了保护,防止因医疗劳动力或能力丧失而导致医疗服务不受控制的中断。
组织良好且早期暂停择期手术对患者结局没有不成比例的影响,同时避免了COVID-19的医院内传播。