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A cohort study of 30 day mortality after NON-EMERGENCY surgery in a COVID-19 cold site

Authors :
Anthony Mundy
Mahreen Pakzad
Konstantinos Kapriniotis
David Walker
Senthil Nathan
Tomasz Kurzawinski
Simon Clarke
Maxine G. B. Tran
Julie Jenks
Clare Allen
Tarek Ezzatt Abdel-Aziz
Manish Chand
Axel Bex
Daniel Heffernan Ho
Clement Orczyk
Vimoshan Arumuham
Tim Briggs
Jamie Lindsay
D. Andrich
Pippa Sangster
Jonathan McCullough
Alistair Grey
Nim Christopher
Rosie Batty
James Moore
David Ralph
Tamsin Greenwell
Georgios Kazantzis
James Crosbie
Anand Kelkar
Fares S. Haddad
David Lawrence
Lois Roberts
Bilal Syed
Simon Choong
Ahmed Elhamshary
Jeremy Ockrim
Davor Jurkovic
Davide Patrini
Robert May
Eleanor Brockbank
John D. Kelly
Tim Mould
Konstantinos Doufekas
Dan Wood
Mark Feneley
Christopher Wood
Arjun Jeyarajah
Ravi Barod
Chetan Bhan
Sofoklis Mitsos
John Hines
Tommy Rampling
Douglas Pendse
Robert Nicolae
Prasad Patki
Justin Collins
Hussain M. Alnajjar
Martin Hayward
Prasanna Sooriakumaran
Louise Dickinson
Adeola Olaitan
Ashwin Sridhar
Naaila Aslam
Sara Rakshani-Moghadam
Sian Allen
Chi-Ying Li
Ioannis C. Kotsopoulos
Geoff Bellingan
Prabhakar Rajan
Tom Strange
Caroline M. Moore
N MacDonald
Jennifer L. Rohn
Veeru Kasivisvanathan
Daron Smith
Rizwan Hamid
Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos
Saurabh Phadnis
Asif Muneer
Dimitrios Volanis
Greg Shaw
Source :
International Journal of Surgery, International Journal of Surgery (London, England)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background Two million non-emergency surgeries are being cancelled globally every week due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which will have a major impact on patients and healthcare systems. Methods During the peak of the pandemic in the United Kingdom, we set up a multicentre cancer network amongst 14 National Health Service institutions, performing urological, thoracic, gynaecological and general surgical urgent and cancer operations at a central COVID-19 cold site. This is a cohort study of 500 consecutive patients undergoing surgery in this network. The primary outcome was 30-day mortality from COVID-19. Secondary outcomes included all-cause mortality and post-operative complications at 30-days. Results 500 patients underwent surgery with median age 62.5 (IQR 51–71). 65% were male, 60% had a known diagnosis of cancer and 61% of surgeries were considered complex or major. No patient died from COVID-19 at 30-days. 30-day all-cause mortality was 3/500 (1%). 10 (2%) patients were diagnosed with COVID-19, 4 (1%) with confirmed laboratory diagnosis and 6 (1%) with probable COVID-19. 33/500 (7%) of patients developed Clavien-Dindo grade 3 or higher complications, with 1/33 (3%) occurring in a patient with COVID-19. Conclusion It is safe to continue cancer and urgent surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic with appropriate service reconfiguration.<br />Highlights • Priority surgeries are being cancelled every week due to the COVID-19 pandemic. • A multicentre surgical referral network was set up as part of an NHS England approach to continuing safe surgery • The referral network consisted of 14 NHS trusts and surgery was performed at a single COVID-19 ‘cold site’. • After 500 surgeries performed, there was a 0% 30-day mortality from COVID-19. • It is safe to continue cancer and priority surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic with appropriate service reconfiguration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17439191
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e5557b84d9d43f047f726b6ba2b69414
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsu.2020.10.019