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Lessons learned after one year of COVID-19 from a urologist and radiotherapist view: A German survey on prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment

Authors :
Nina N. Harke
Christian Wagner
Robert M. Hermann
Boris A. Hadaschik
Jan Philipp Radtke
Alev Altay-Langguth
Stefan Aufderklamm
Christian Bach
Martina Becker-Schiebe
Andreas Blana
Frank Bruns
Stephan Buse
Stephanie E. Combs
Christina L. Engels
Emad Ezzibdeh
Marcel Fiedler
Laura-Anna Fischer
Mahmoud Farzat
Alexander Frismann
Matthias M. Heck
Christoph Henkenberens
Marie C. Roesch
Christoph Käding
Gunther Klautke
Philipp Krausewitz
Markus A. Kuczyk
Conrad Leitsmann
Sebastian Lettmaier
Samy Mahjoub
Andreas Manseck
Daniel Medenwald
Andreas Meyer
Oliver Micke
Rudolf Moritz
Marcel Ott
Inga Peters
Sasa Pokupic
Daniel Porres
Felix Preisser
Kathrin Reichel
Andreas Schneider
Christian Schwentner
Sergiu Scobioala
Michael Truss
Daniel Wegener
Felix Wezel
Kay Willborn
Jörn H. Witt
Andrea Wittig
Michael Wittlinger
Hendrik A. Wolff
Volker Zimmermanns
Hans Christiansen
Source :
PLoS ONE, Vol 17, Iss 6 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Since the beginning of the pandemic in 2020, COVID-19 has changed the medical landscape. International recommendations for localized prostate cancer (PCa) include deferred treatment and adjusted therapeutic routines. Materials and methods To longitudinally evaluate changes in PCa treatment strategies in urological and radiotherapy departments in Germany, a link to a survey was sent to 134 institutions covering two representative baseline weeks prior to the pandemic and 13 weeks from March 2020 to February 2021. The questionnaire captured the numbers of radical prostatectomies, prostate biopsies and case numbers for conventional and hypofractionation radiotherapy. The results were evaluated using descriptive analyses. Results A total of 35% of the questionnaires were completed. PCa therapy increased by 6% in 2020 compared to 2019. At baseline, a total of 69 radiotherapy series and 164 radical prostatectomies (RPs) were documented. The decrease to 60% during the first wave of COVID-19 particularly affected low-risk PCa. The recovery throughout the summer months was followed by a renewed reduction to 58% at the end of 2020. After a gradual decline to 61% until July 2020, the number of prostate biopsies remained stable (89% to 98%) during the second wave. The use of RP fluctuated after an initial decrease without apparent prioritization of risk groups. Conventional fractionation was used in 66% of patients, followed by moderate hypofractionation (30%) and ultrahypofractionation (4%). One limitation was a potential selection bias of the selected weeks and the low response rate. Conclusion While the diagnosis and therapy of PCa were affected in both waves of the pandemic, the interim increase between the peaks led to a higher total number of patients in 2020 than in 2019. Recommendations regarding prioritization and fractionation routines were implemented heterogeneously, leaving unexplored potential for future pandemic challenges.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
17
Issue :
6
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.12ece23db50445d8b382e07e29f1afb3
Document Type :
article