1. The dramatic COVID 19 outbreak in Italy is responsible of a huge drop of urological surgical activity: a multicenter observational study
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Salvatore Micali, Marco Borghesi, Elisabetta Bertellini, Bruno Dall’Oglio, Franco Gaboardi, Giovannalberto Pini, Luisa Zegna, Simone Crivellaro, Alessandro Antonelli, Antonio Carbone, D. Dente, Angelo Cafarelli, Paolo Umari, Riccardo Bertolo, Lorenzo Gatti, Filippo Annino, Marco Sandri, Giovanni Ferrari, Vincenzo Pagliarulo, Pierluigi Bove, Simone Flammia, Carlo Terrone, Antonio Galfano, Francesco Greco, Costantino Leonardo, Antonio Luigi Pastore, Virginia Varca, Roberto Falabella, Luca Cindolo, Marco Oderda, Riccardo Schiavina, Lorenzo Spirito, Orietta Dalpiaz, R. Nucciotti, Stefano Zaramella, Paolo Parma, Giovanni Costa, Andrea Cocci, Alessandro Volpe, Lorenzo Berti, Sada Khorrami, Raffaele Baio, Angelo Porreca, Alfio Corsaro, Maria Chiara Sighinolfi, Eugenio Brunocilla, Vincenzo Altieri, Alessandro Tafuri, Paolo Verze, Giovanni Cacciamani, Giorgio Bozzini, Maurizio Schenone, AldoMassimo Bocciardi, Mario Falsaperla, Michele Amenta, Antonio Celia, Domenico Veneziano, Carmine Sciorio, Bernardo Rocco, Marinella Finocchiaro, Carlo Ceruti, Luigi Pucci, Daniele D'Agostino, Andrea Minervini, Carlo Marenghi, Alberto Calori, Fabrizio Gallo, Rocco B., Sighinolfi M.C., Sandri M., Altieri V., Amenta M., Annino F., Antonelli A., Baio R., Bertolo R., Bocciardi A., Borghesi M., Bove P., Bozzini G., Cacciamani G., Calori A., Caffarelli A., Celia A., Cocci A., Corsaro A., Costa G., Ceruti C., Cindolo L., Crivellaro S., Dalpiaz O., D'Agostino D., Dall'Oglio B., Falabella R., Falsaperla M., Finocchiaro M., Gaboardi F., Galfano A., Gallo F., Grego F., Leonardo C., Nucciotti R., Oderda M., Pagliarulo V., Parma P., Pastore L., Pini G., Porreca A., Pucci L., Schenone M., Schiavina R., Sciorio C., Spirito L., Tafuri A., Terrone C., Umari P., Varca V., Veneziano D., Verze P., Volpe A., Micali S., Berti L., Zaramella S., and Minervini A.
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Urologic Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,#uroonc ,COVID-19 outbreak ,trend of variation ,urologic surgery ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Comorbidity ,#COVID19 ,#Urology ,urological surgery ,COVID-19 ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,Humans ,Italy ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Urologic Surgical Procedures ,Pandemics ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Urologic Surgical Procedure ,Care provision ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Case fatality rate ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Outbreak ,Original Articles ,medicine.disease ,Settore MED/24 ,COVID‐19 outbreak ,Urologic disease ,Observational study ,Original Article ,business ,Elective Surgical Procedure - Abstract
Objective Italy is facing the COVID‐19 outbreak with an abrupt reorganization of its national health‐system, in order to augment care provision to symptomatic patients. The sudden shift of personnel and resources towards COVID‐19 care has led to the reduction of surgery, with possible severe drawbacks. The aim of the study is to describe the trend in surgical volume in urology, in Italy. Materials and Methods Thirty‐three urological units with physicians affiliated to the AGILE consortium were involved in a survey. Urologists were asked to report the amount of surgical elective procedures week‐by‐week, from the beginning of the emergency to the following month. Results The 33 hospitals involved in the study account, globally, for 22,945 beds and are distributed in 13/20 Italian regions. Before the outbreak, the involved urology units performed an overall amount of 1,213 procedures per week, half of which were oncological. One month later, the amount of surgery declined by 78%. Lombardy, the first region with positive‐cases, experienced a 94% reduction. The decrease in oncological and non‐oncological surgical activity was 35,9% and 89%, respectively. The trend of the decline showed a delay of roughly 2 weeks for the other regions. Conclusion Italy, the country with the highest fatality rate from COVID‐19, is experiencing a sudden decline in surgical activity. It is inversely related to the increase in COVID‐19 care, with potential harm particularly in the oncological field. The Italian experience can be helpful for future surgical pre‐planning in other countries not so hardly hit by the disease yet.
- Published
- 2021