Surgical Emergency Unit, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Surgical Emergency Unit, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK.
Surgeon. 2021 Dec;19(6):e452-e461. doi: 10.1016/j.surge.2021.02.003. Epub 2021 Mar 3.
The current COVID-19 pandemic has greatly changed the way surgery is delivered. In particular, current guidelines and policies have highlighted the need to use high level Personal Protective Equipment to reduce the risk of viral infection during open and laparoscopic surgical procedures. In particular, it was felt that the laparoscopic approach was at higher risk of viral transmission due to the chimney effect of the smoke escape from the trocars during and after the procedure. However, with this being a new and largely unknown viral agent, guidelines have been based on speculation and extrapolation from previous studies conducted in completely different situations, and led to anxiety amongst surgeons and theatre staff. We decided to conduct a systematic review of the Literature to try to clarify whether inhalation of surgical smoke can increase the risk of COVID-19 infection.
A thorough search of the relevant Literature was performed following the PRISMA guidelines and the most relevant papers on this topic were selected for qualitative analysis. Duplicates, review, personal opinions and guidelines have been excluded. Quantitative analysis has not been performed due to the lack of homogeneous high-quality studies.
Literature search identified 740 papers but only 34 of them were suitable for qualitative analysis. The quality of those studies is generally quite low. We were not able to find any evidence directly linking surgical smoke with viral transmission, other than in patients with active HPV infection.
Inhalation of surgical smoke can be generally hazardous, and therefore the use of PPE during surgical operations must be recommended in any case. However, the present systematic review of the existent Literature did not identify any significant evidence of the risk of viral transmission with the surgical smoke, therefore the current guidelines restricting the use of laparoscopy and/or diathermy during the current Covid-19 pandemic may be considered excessive and non-evidence based.
当前的 COVID-19 大流行极大地改变了手术方式。特别是,当前的指南和政策强调需要使用高级别的个人防护设备,以降低在开放和腹腔镜手术过程中病毒感染的风险。特别是,人们认为腹腔镜方法由于在手术过程中和手术结束后从套管中逸出的烟雾的烟囱效应,因此具有更高的病毒传播风险。然而,由于这是一种新的且在很大程度上未知的病毒制剂,因此指南是基于对以前在完全不同情况下进行的研究的推测和推断制定的,这导致外科医生和手术室工作人员感到焦虑。我们决定对文献进行系统回顾,试图阐明手术烟雾吸入是否会增加 COVID-19 感染的风险。
根据 PRISMA 指南对相关文献进行了全面搜索,并选择了该主题最相关的论文进行定性分析。排除了重复项、综述、个人意见和指南。由于缺乏同质的高质量研究,因此未进行定量分析。
文献搜索共确定了 740 篇论文,但只有 34 篇适合定性分析。这些研究的质量普遍较低。除了在患有活动性 HPV 感染的患者中,我们没有发现任何直接将手术烟雾与病毒传播联系起来的证据。
手术烟雾的吸入通常是有害的,因此无论如何都必须在手术过程中使用 PPE。然而,对现有文献的系统回顾并未发现任何与手术烟雾有关的病毒传播风险的明显证据,因此目前在当前的 COVID-19 大流行期间限制使用腹腔镜检查和/或电烙术的指南可能被认为是过度的且没有依据的。