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Urgent and emergency surgery for secondary peritonitis during the COVID-19 outbreak: an unseen burden of a healthcare crisis

Authors :
Giampaolo Ugolini
Michele Grassia
Stefano Bonilauri
Mario Chisari
Simone Nicosia
Nicola Zanini
Claudia Benini
Gaetano Vetrone
Federico Zanzi
Luca Di Donato
Michele Masetti
Enrico Guerra
Raffaele Lombardi
Andrea Lucchi
Francesco Pasini
Gaetano Maria Cattaneo
Mauro Filosa
Guido Fallani
Gianluca Garulli
Elio Jovine
Fallani G.
Lombardi R.
Masetti M.
Chisari M.
Zanini N.
Cattaneo G.M.
Filosa M.
Zanzi F.
Guerra E.
Bonilauri S.
Di Donato L.
Garulli G.
Lucchi A.
Grassia M.
Ugolini G.
Pasini F.
Vetrone G.
Benini C.
Nicosia S.
Jovine E.
Source :
Updates in Surgery
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer International Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has raised concerns about the negative impact of the fear of contagion on people’s willingness to seek medical care and the subsequent effects on patients’ prognosis. To date, not much is known about the outcomes of acute surgical diseases in this scenario. The aim of this multicenter observational study is to explore the effects of COVID-19 outbreak on the outcomes of patients who underwent surgery for peritonitis. Patients undergoing surgery for secondary peritonitis during the first COVID-19 surge in Italy (March 23–May 4, 2020—COVID period group) were compared with patients who underwent surgery during the same time interval of year 2019 (no-COVID period group). The primary endpoint was the development of postoperative complications. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to identify predictors of complications. Of the 332 patients studied, 149 were in the COVID period group and 183 were in the no-COVID period group. Patients in the COVID period group had an increased frequency of late presentations to the emergency departments (43% vs. 31.1%; P = 0.026) and a higher rate of postoperative complications (35.6% vs. 18%; P < 0.001). The same results were found in the subset analysis of patients with severe peritonitis at surgical exploration. The ASA score, severity of peritonitis, qSOFA score, diagnosis other than appendicitis, and COVID period resulted independent predictors of complications. During the COVID-19 pandemic patients with peritonitis had a higher rate of complicated postoperative courses, weighing on hospital costs and assistance efforts already pressured by the ongoing sanitary crisis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20383312 and 2038131X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Updates in Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31a24d7e6e2c0d05924785d5d5c52e7b