Odette Cancer Centre (Parmar, Chan), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (Eskander, Irish); Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (Eskander, Sander, Naimark), University of Toronto; Toronto Health Economic and Technology Assessment Collaboration (Sander), University Health Network; Division of Nephrology (Naimark), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Department of Surgical Oncology (Irish), Princess Margaret Cancer Centre; Canadian Centre for Applied Research in Cancer Control (Chan), Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ. 2022 Mar 21;194(11):E408-E414. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.202380.
With the declaration of the global pandemic, surgical slowdowns were instituted to conserve health care resources for anticipated surges in patients with COVID-19. The long-term implications on survival of these slowdowns for patients with cancer in Canada is unknown.
We constructed a microsimulation model based on real-world population data on cancer care from Ontario, Canada, from 2019 and 2020. Our model estimated wait times for cancer surgery over a 6-month period during the pandemic by simulating a slowdown in operating room capacity (60% operating room resources in month 1, 70% in month 2, 85% in months 3-6), as compared with simulated prepandemic conditions with 100% resources. We used incremental differences in simulated wait times to model survival using per-day hazard ratios for risk of death. Primary outcomes included life-years lost per patient and per cancer population. We conducted scenario analyses to evaluate alternative, hypothetical scenarios of different levels of surgical slowdowns on risk of death.
The simulated model population comprised 22 799 patients waiting for cancer surgery before the pandemic and 20 177 patients during the pandemic. Mean wait time to surgery prepandemic was 25 days and during the pandemic was 32 days. Excess wait time led to 0.01-0.07 life-years lost per patient across cancer sites, translating to 843 (95% credible interval 646-950) life-years lost among patients with cancer in Ontario.
Pandemic-related slowdowns of cancer surgeries were projected to result in decreased long-term survival for many patients with cancer. Measures to preserve surgical resources and health care capacity for affected patients are critical to mitigate unintended consequences.
随着全球大流行的宣布,为了为预计因 COVID-19 而激增的患者节省医疗资源,手术量有所减少。目前尚不清楚这些手术量减少对加拿大癌症患者的长期生存影响。
我们基于加拿大安大略省的癌症护理实际人口数据,构建了一个微观模拟模型。我们的模型通过模拟手术室容量的减少(第 1 个月减少 60%的手术室资源,第 2 个月减少 70%,第 3 个月至第 6 个月减少 85%)来估计大流行期间癌症手术的等待时间,与模拟大流行前条件下 100%资源相比。我们使用模拟等待时间的增量差异,使用每天死亡风险的风险比来建模生存。主要结果包括每位患者和每个癌症人群的损失生命年数。我们进行了方案分析,以评估不同程度手术减缓对死亡风险的假设方案。
模拟模型人群包括大流行前等待癌症手术的 22799 名患者和大流行期间的 20177 名患者。大流行前手术前的平均等待时间为 25 天,大流行期间为 32 天。额外的等待时间导致每位患者的损失生命年数减少 0.01-0.07 年,这意味着安大略省的癌症患者中有 843 人(95%可信区间 646-950)的生命年数减少。
预计与大流行相关的癌症手术减缓将导致许多癌症患者的长期生存下降。为受影响的患者保留手术资源和医疗保健能力的措施对于减轻意外后果至关重要。