Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Meta-Research Innovation Center at Stanford (METRICS), Stanford University, Stanford, United States.
Elife. 2023 Apr 4;12:e85679. doi: 10.7554/eLife.85679.
The relocation and reconstruction of health care resources and systems during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic may have affected cancer care. An umbrella review was undertaken to summarize the findings from systematic reviews on impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer treatment modification, delays, and cancellations; delays or cancellations in screening and diagnosis; psychosocial well-being, financial distress, and use of telemedicine as well as on other aspects of cancer care. Bibliographic databases were searched for relevant systematic reviews with or without meta-analysis published before November 29th, 2022. Abstract, full- text screening, and data extraction were performed by two independent reviewers. AMSTAR-2 was used for critical appraisal of included systematic reviews. Fifty-one systematic reviews were included in our analysis. Most reviews were based on observational studies judged to be at medium and high risk of bias. Only two reviews had high or moderate scores based on AMSTAR-2. Findings suggest treatment modifications in cancer care during the pandemic versus the pre-pandemic period were based on low level of evidence. Different degrees of delays and cancellations in cancer treatment, screening, and diagnosis were observed, with low- and- middle- income countries and countries that implemented lockdowns being disproportionally affected. A shift from in-person appointments to telemedicine use was observed, but utility of telemedicine, challenges in implementation and cost-effectiveness in cancer care were little explored. Evidence was consistent in suggesting psychosocial well-being of patients with cancer deteriorated, and cancer patients experienced financial distress, albeit results were in general not compared to pre-pandemic levels. Impact of cancer care disruption during the pandemic on cancer prognosis was little explored. In conclusion, substantial but heterogenous impact of COVID-19 pandemic on cancer care has been observed.
在 2019 年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间,医疗保健资源和系统的重新安置和重建可能会影响癌症护理。我们进行了伞式综述,以总结关于 COVID-19 大流行对癌症治疗修改、延迟和取消、筛查和诊断延迟或取消、心理社会健康、财务困境以及远程医疗使用以及癌症护理其他方面的系统评价的研究结果。我们搜索了包含或不包含 2022 年 11 月 29 日之前发表的荟萃分析的相关系统评价的文献数据库。两名独立评审员进行了摘要、全文筛选和数据提取。我们使用 AMSTAR-2 对纳入的系统评价进行了批判性评估。我们的分析包括 51 项系统评价。大多数综述基于观察性研究,被认为存在中高偏倚风险。只有两项综述基于 AMSTAR-2 获得了高或中评分。研究结果表明,大流行期间与大流行前相比,癌症护理的治疗方法发生了改变,但其证据水平较低。观察到癌症治疗、筛查和诊断的不同程度的延迟和取消,中低收入国家和实施封锁的国家受到的影响不成比例。观察到从面对面预约到远程医疗使用的转变,但远程医疗的实用性、实施中的挑战和癌症护理的成本效益尚未得到充分探讨。有证据表明,癌症患者的心理社会健康状况恶化,癌症患者经历了财务困境,尽管结果通常与大流行前的水平无法相比。癌症护理中断对癌症预后的影响尚未得到充分探讨。总之,观察到 COVID-19 大流行对癌症护理产生了实质性但异质的影响。