| Literature DB >> 32298036 |
Michael C Topf1, Jared A Shenson1, F Christopher Holsinger1, Samuel H Wald2,3, Lisa J Cianfichi3, Eben L Rosenthal1, John B Sunwoo1.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed an extraordinary demand on the United States health care system. Many institutions have canceled elective and non-urgent procedures to conserve resources and limit exposure. While operational definitions of elective and urgent categories exist, there is a degree of surgeon judgment in designation. In the present commentary, we provide a framework for prioritizing head and neck surgery during the pandemic. Unique considerations for the head and neck patient are examined including risk to the oncology patient, outcomes following delay in head and neck cancer therapy, and risk of transmission during otolaryngologic surgery. Our case prioritization criteria consist of four categories: urgent-proceed with surgery, less urgent-consider postpone > 30 days, less urgent-consider postpone 30 to 90 days, and case-by-case basis. Finally, we discuss our preoperative clinical pathway for transmission mitigation including defining low-risk and high-risk surgery for transmission and role of preoperative COVID-19 testing.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; clinical practice guidelines; head and neck cancer; surgical oncology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32298036 PMCID: PMC7262168 DOI: 10.1002/hed.26184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Head Neck ISSN: 1043-3074 Impact factor: 3.147
Pandemic triage levels and impact on cancer surgical care
| Triage level 1 | Triage level 2 | Triage level 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early in the pandemic | Worsening pandemic | Worst‐case scenario | |
| Key signs of this stage |
Emergency department volumes are up |
Hospitals have surged to maximum bed capacity EDs are overwhelmed Insufficient ventilators Hospital staff absenteeism >20% |
Hospitals have altered standards of care to accommodate expanded capacity Hospital staff absenteeism >30% |
| Modifications to hospital care |
Preserve bed capacity by canceling elective surgeries requiring hospitalization Increase patient care capacity Implement enhanced infection control |
Preserve bed capacity by canceling all elective surgeries Further increase patient care capacity Preserve oxygen capacity |
Free bed capacity by facilitating early discharge Preserve bed capacity by limiting urgent cases |
| Impact on cancer surgical care |
Only urgent cases (<30 d) |
Only urgent cases (<30 d) Consider early postoperative discharge |
Only emergent cases (“serious threat to life”) Expedite early postoperative discharge |
Note: Adapted from Utah Pandemic Influenza Hospital and ICU Triage Guidelines.
Abbreviation: ED, emergency department.
Stratification of common head and neck surgery cases by urgency
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HPV‐negative HNSCC (especially those with airway concerns) HPV‐positive HNSCC with significant disease burden or delay in diagnosis HNSCC patients with complications of cancer treatment Recurrent HNSCC Thyroid Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma Medullary thyroid carcinoma Large (>4 cm) follicular lesions, neoplasms, or even indeterminate nodules PTC with suspicion or identified metastatic disease Locally aggressive PTC Revision PTC with active progression of disease Parathyroidectomy with renal function declining Skull base malignancy Salivary cancer Salivary duct carcinoma High‐grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma Adenoid cystic carcinoma Carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma Acinic cell carcinoma Adenocarcinoma Other aggressive, high‐grade salivary histology Skin cancer Melanoma > 1 mm thickness Merkel cell carcinoma Advanced‐stage, high risk squamous cell carcinoma Basal cell carcinoma in critical area (ie, orbit) |
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Low‐risk PTC without metastasis Low‐grade salivary carcinoma |
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Thyroid Goiter without airway/respiratory compromise Routine benign thyroid nodules and thyroiditis Revision PTC with stable or slow rate of progression Parathyroidectomy with stable renal function Benign salivary lesions Skin cancer Melanoma ≤ 1 mm thickness Basal cell carcinoma where cosmetic impact/morbidity is likely low with further growth Low‐risk squamous cell carcinoma |
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Rare histology with uncertain rate of progression Diagnostic procedures, such as direct laryngoscopy with biopsy |
Abbreviations: HPV, human papillomavirus; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; PTC, papillary thyroid carcinoma.
FIGURE 1Surgical case prioritization process during COVID‐19 pandemic [Color figure can be viewed at http://wileyonlinelibrary.com]
FIGURE 2Preoperative clinical screening pathway for COVID‐19 [Color figure can be viewed at http://wileyonlinelibrary.com]
Estimated transmission risk categories for patients undergoing urgent head and neck surgery
| Low‐risk: no mucosa involved in surgery | High‐risk: transmucosal surgery |
|---|---|
|
Thyroidectomy Parathyroidectomy Neck dissection Wide local excision of skin cancers (that does not involve eye, nose, mouth, sinus) Parotidectomy Branchial cleft excision |
Any transoral procedure Glossectomy, buccal resection, floor of mouth, etc. Lateral oropharyngectomy Composite resection of the mandible Palatectomy Maxillectomy Rhinectomy Laryngeal surgery Vocal cord procedures Partial/total laryngectomy Transoral robotic surgery Direct laryngoscopy |
Preoperative COVID‐19 clinical screening
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In the past 2 weeks, have you: 1. Traveled outside the United States? 2. Had direct contact with a COVID‐19 positive patient? 3. Had influenza‐like symptoms? 4. Fever (subjective or temp ≥ 100)? 5. Sore throat? 6. Cough? 7. Shortness of breath? |