Hamadalnile A, Mariathasan M, Riad Mahmud, Patel A G, Atkinson S, Prachalias A A, Srinivasan P, Jiao L, Bhogal R H, Menon K, Schneider C
Department of HPB Surgery, King's College Hospital, London, UK.
Department of General Surgery, Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells Hospitals, Maidstone, UK.
Surg Oncol. 2025 Feb;58:102169. doi: 10.1016/j.suronc.2024.102169. Epub 2024 Nov 23.
During the Covid-19 pandemic cancer surgery was severely affected due to relocation of healthcare resources and the resulting restructuring of cancer pathways. Although this potentially affected rapidly progressing malignancies like pancreatic cancer the most, little is known about long-term outcomes following pancreatectomy.
Survival data from two pancreatic surgery centres in the UK was analysed with patients being compared across pre-pandemic (C19-) and intra-pandemic (C19+) groups. Demographic, pathological and surgical pathway parameters were evaluated with multivariate analysis and propensity score matching.
Out of 123 patients, 60 had surgery during the pandemic. The main strategy to reduce disruptions to pancreatic surgery was relocation of services to private sector facilities without emergency medicine departments. Although time to surgery was delayed by almost 20 days during the pandemic, there were no significant differences in overall survival at 22 months vs. 24 months or disease free survival at 15 months vs. 16 months for the C19+ and C19- groups, respectively. Adjuvant chemotherapy, Charlson comorbidity score, tumour stage and resection margin status were found to be independent predictors for overall survival whereas only adjuvant chemotherapy and Charlson comorbidity score were predictive of disease free survival.
This article provides a template for the effective restructuring of pancreatectomy pathways during a pandemic with associated lockdowns and provides the first evidence that the quality of outcomes can be maintained in this difficult environment. It is hoped that these results will provide a framework for addressing surgical oncology challenges in future pandemics.