Haribhai Sonia, Bhatia Komal, Shahmanesh Maryam
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Africa Health Research Institute, Durban, South Africa.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 Apr 4;3(4):e0001413. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001413. eCollection 2023.
Globally, 28.4 million non-emergent ('elective') surgical procedures have been deferred during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study evaluated the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on elective breast- or colorectal cancer (CRC) procedure backlogs and attributable mortality, globally. Further, we evaluated the interaction between procedure deferrals and health systems, internationally. Relevant articles from any country, published between December 2019-24 November 2022, were identified through searches of online databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE) and by examining the reference lists of retrieved articles. We organised health system-related findings thematically per the Structures-Processes-Outcomes conceptual model by Donabedian (1966). Of 337 identified articles, we included 50. Eleven (22.0%) were reviews. The majority of included studies originated from high-income countries (n = 38, 76.0%). An ecological, modelling study elucidated that global 12-week procedure cancellation rates ranged from 68.3%-73%; Europe and Central Asia accounted for the majority of cancellations (n = 8,430,348) and sub-Saharan Africa contributed the least (n = 520,459). The percentage reduction in global, institutional elective breast cancer surgery activity ranged from 5.68%-16.5%. For CRC, this ranged from 0%-70.9%. Significant evidence is presented on how insufficient pandemic preparedness necessitated procedure deferrals, internationally. We also outlined ancillary determinants of delayed surgery (e.g., patient-specific factors). The following global health system response themes are presented: Structural changes (i.e., hospital re-organisation), Process-related changes (i.e., adapted healthcare provision) and the utilisation of Outcomes (i.e., SARS-CoV-2 infection incidence among patients or healthcare personnel, postoperative pulmonary complication incidence, hospital readmission, length of hospital stay and tumour staging) as indicators of health system response efficacy. Evidence on procedure backlogs and attributable mortality was limited, partly due to insufficient, real-time surveillance of cancer outcomes, internationally. Elective surgery activity has decreased and cancer services have adapted rapidly, worldwide. Further research is needed to understand the impact of COVID-19 on cancer mortality and the efficacy of health system mitigation measures, globally.
在全球范围内,2840万例非紧急(“择期”)外科手术在新冠疫情期间被推迟。本研究评估了新冠疫情对全球择期乳腺癌或结直肠癌(CRC)手术积压情况以及可归因死亡率的影响。此外,我们还在国际范围内评估了手术推迟与卫生系统之间的相互作用。通过检索在线数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE)并查阅检索到的文章的参考文献列表,确定了2019年12月至2022年11月24日期间任何国家发表的相关文章。我们根据Donabedian(1966年)的结构 - 过程 - 结果概念模型,按主题整理了与卫生系统相关的研究结果。在337篇已识别的文章中,我们纳入了50篇。其中11篇(22.0%)为综述。纳入研究的大多数来自高收入国家(n = 38,76.0%)。一项生态建模研究表明,全球12周手术取消率在68.3%至73%之间;欧洲和中亚地区的取消手术数量最多(n = 8430348),撒哈拉以南非洲地区的贡献最少(n = 520459)。全球机构性择期乳腺癌手术活动的减少百分比在5.68%至16.5%之间。对于结直肠癌手术,这一范围在0%至70.9%之间。有大量证据表明,在国际上,疫情准备不足如何导致了手术推迟。我们还概述了手术延迟的辅助决定因素(例如,患者特定因素)。以下是呈现的全球卫生系统应对主题:结构变化(即医院重组)、过程相关变化(即调整后的医疗服务提供)以及将结果的利用(即患者或医护人员中的新冠病毒感染发病率、术后肺部并发症发病率、医院再入院率、住院时间和肿瘤分期)作为卫生系统应对效果的指标。关于手术积压和可归因死亡率的证据有限,部分原因是国际上对癌症结果缺乏充分的实时监测。在全球范围内,择期手术活动减少,癌症服务迅速调整。需要进一步研究以了解新冠疫情对癌症死亡率的影响以及全球卫生系统缓解措施的效果。