Liu Ivan Z, Whitehead Jonathon, Schlafly Madeleine, Pakhchanian Haig, Raiker Rahul, Snoddy Mark C
Medical College of Georgia Department of Orthopedics, Augusta University, Augusta, GA.
George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC.
J Hand Surg Glob Online. 2023 Mar;5(2):151-158. doi: 10.1016/j.jhsg.2022.12.004. Epub 2022 Dec 22.
To quantify and describe the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on procedural volume trends in hand and wrist surgery from 2020 to early 2022 at multiple centers.
In this retrospective comparative study, a real-time, national, federated research database was used to identify patients of interest from 56 health care organizations across the United States. Patients were queried from March 1, 2018, to February 28, 2022. Current Procedural Terminology codes were chosen using the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education's hand fellowship procedure requirements.
Common hand and wrist surgeries exhibited substantial fluctuations in procedural volume per health care organization during the COVID-19 pandemic. Time periods with considerable procedural volume decreases corresponded with surges in increased COVID-19 caseloads and emergence of COVID-19 variants. Periods of procedural volume increase occurred in the summer of 2020 and immediately following distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine to the public. Fixation of metacarpal fracture, fixation of phalangeal fracture, tendon transfer, flexor tendon repair, and extensor tendon repair consistently showed decreased volumes over the study period. In contrast, ulnar nerve decompression was the only procedure to experience a statistically significant increase in volume over an entire year (2021, +19.2%, < .001), as compared to before the pandemic.
Major milestones of the COVID-19 pandemic correlated with fluctuations in the number of hand and wrist procedures performed across the United States. Future studies should seek to evaluate the impact of patient backlogs and individual procedure fluctuations on financial impacts, patient outcomes, and orthopedic trainee experience.
TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Economic/Decision Analysis IV.
量化并描述2020年至2022年初新冠疫情对多个中心手和腕部手术手术量趋势的影响。
在这项回顾性比较研究中,使用一个实时的、全国性的联合研究数据库,从美国56个医疗保健机构中识别出感兴趣的患者。对2018年3月1日至2022年2月28日期间的患者进行查询。根据研究生医学教育认证委员会对手部专科培训手术要求选择当前手术操作术语编码。
在新冠疫情期间,每个医疗保健机构的常见手和腕部手术手术量出现大幅波动。手术量大幅下降的时期与新冠病例数激增以及新冠病毒变种出现相对应。手术量增加的时期出现在2020年夏季以及新冠疫苗向公众分发后不久。在研究期间,掌骨骨折固定术、指骨骨折固定术、肌腱转移术、屈肌腱修复术和伸肌腱修复术的手术量持续下降。相比之下,与疫情前相比,尺神经减压术是唯一在一整年(2021年,增加19.2%,<0.001)手术量有统计学显著增加的手术。
新冠疫情的主要节点与美国手和腕部手术数量的波动相关。未来的研究应评估患者积压和个别手术波动对财务影响、患者结局和骨科实习医生经验的影响。
研究类型/证据水平:经济/决策分析IV级。