Department of Internal Medicine, Hospital Clínic, August Pi i Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBAPS) and Clínic Foundation for Biomedical Research (FCRB), University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Campus Villarroel Medical Center, Barcelona, Spain.
Int J Cancer. 2023 Feb 1;152(3):384-395. doi: 10.1002/ijc.34260. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
Despite extensive research on cancer care during the COVID-19 pandemic, evidence on the impact on prediagnostic time intervals is lacking. To better understand how COVID-19 changed the pathway to diagnosis of cancer, we examined the length of intervals from symptom onset to diagnosis for 13 common cancer types with known clinical stage over 1-year nonpandemic period (March 2019 to March 2020; N = 844) and three biannual COVID periods (March 2020 to September 2021; N = 1172). We analyzed the patient interval (from first symptoms to presentation to a physician), the primary care/emergency department interval (from presentation with relevant symptoms to a primary care or emergency department physician to referral to a hospital-based diagnosis center) and the hospital interval (from referral to diagnosis). Compared to nonpandemic data, there were significant changes across COVID periods. The pandemic mostly impacted patient intervals for cancers diagnosed over the first 6 months after onset in March 2020. Overall median patient intervals were longest in the early COVID period (39 [IQR 22-64] days) and shortest in the nonpandemic period (20 [IQR 13-30] days; Kruskal-Wallis test [χ ], P < .0001). Differences in clinical stage between periods were relevant, with cancers from the mid-period (September 2020 to March 2021) showing the most advanced stage. A shift to later stage was plausibly a result of delayed intervals in the early COVID period. Since intervals are eventually relevant to prognosis, our results provide a baseline against which the impact of improvement strategies to minimize the negative outcomes of COVID-19-associated cancer delays can be assessed and implemented.
尽管针对 COVID-19 大流行期间的癌症护理进行了广泛的研究,但缺乏有关对诊断前时间间隔影响的证据。为了更好地了解 COVID-19 如何改变癌症诊断途径,我们检查了在已知临床分期的 13 种常见癌症类型中,从症状出现到诊断的间隔长度,这一时间段横跨 1 年的非大流行时期(2019 年 3 月至 2020 年 3 月;N=844)和三个双年 COVID 时期(2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 9 月;N=1172)。我们分析了患者间隔(从首次出现症状到就诊于医生)、初级保健/急诊部间隔(从出现相关症状到初级保健医生或急诊医生就诊到转诊至医院诊断中心)和医院间隔(从转诊至诊断)。与非大流行数据相比,在 COVID 期间出现了明显的变化。大流行主要影响了 2020 年 3 月发病后前 6 个月内诊断出的癌症的患者间隔。总体中位数患者间隔在早期 COVID 期最长(39 [IQR 22-64] 天),在非大流行期最短(20 [IQR 13-30] 天;Kruskal-Wallis 检验[χ ],P<0.0001)。各期之间的临床分期差异具有相关性,中期(2020 年 9 月至 2021 年 3 月)的癌症分期最晚期。间隔延迟可能导致这种晚期情况,这是早期 COVID 期的结果。由于间隔最终与预后相关,因此我们的结果提供了一个基线,可根据该基线评估并实施旨在最大程度减少 COVID-19 相关癌症延迟的负面影响的改进策略。