Literature DB >> 32362496

Urolithiasis Practice Patterns Following the COVID-19 Pandemic: Overview from the EULIS Collaborative Research Working Group.

Tzevat Tefik1, Selcuk Guven2, Luca Villa3, Mehmet Ilker Gokce4, Panagiotis Kallidonis5, Kremena Petkova6, Murat Can Kiremit7, Mehmet Giray Sonmez8, Elisa de Lorenzis9, Bilal Eryildirim10, Kemal Sarica11.   

Abstract

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32362496      PMCID: PMC7183952          DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2020.04.057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Urol        ISSN: 0302-2838            Impact factor:   20.096


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COVID-19 was first reported as a novel pulmonary infection in December 2019 [1]. Apart from being a potentially lethal condition, COVID-19 is also affecting health care strategies for other medical conditions. Ficarra et al [2] have made suggestions regarding urological surgeries during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the authors focused on all urological pathologies and reported information from Italy, a country that seemed to be the epicenter of the pandemic in Europe [2]. Therefore, we sought to obtain an up-to-date perspective on how the routine practice patterns of expert European endourologists changed (or adapted) during the COVID-19 pandemic via a survey. By focusing on expert experience coming from the field, we aimed to provide an algorithm to guide the management of urinary stone disease during this unprecedented time of extraordinary stress on the global endourology community. An online survey composed of 31 questions (Supplementary material) using the web-based Survey-Monkey system (Palo Alto, CA) was circulated primarily to authors who were in the EULIS working groups, whose main areas of expertise was urinary stone disease, and who had contributed to the literature to date. Among 98 experts approached, 60 physicians (61.2%) responded. The distribution of the countries involved is given in Table 1 . At the time of survey completion, the first COVID-19 pandemic case was reported >21 d previously in the country of 67.2% of the respondents and between 7 and 21 d previously in the country of 32.8% of the respondents (Table 1). While all responding experts experienced a change of at least 25% in routine clinical practice, 49% reported a change of >90% in (Fig. 1 A). Among the experts, 72.3% used telemedicine during the pandemic (Fig. 1B).
Table 1

Data for the 60 participants from 20 different countries interested in urolithiasis who were included in the study survey.a

CountryRegion(s)Total casesTime between officially reported first case and response to the survey (d)Total deaths due to COVID-19Time between officially reported first 10 deaths and response to the survey (d)
AzerbaijanBaku298315Not applicable
AustriaVienna, Salzburg10 182351289
BelgiumGent12 7755670515
BulgariaSofia399248Not applicable
CzechiaSouth Bohemia330830313
DenmarkFredericia, Copenhagen2860349010
FranceParis51 47769352324
GeorgiaTbilisi115340Not applicable
GermanyBaden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Niedersachsen67 3666677516
GreecePatras, Northeastern Greece1314344911
ItalyBergamo, Lombardy, Rome, Milan, Naples105 792631242835
North MacedoniaSkopje329349Not applicable
PolandMalopolska231128337
RomaniaBucharest224533697
RussiaSaint Petersburg233760170
SerbiaBelgrade90025132
SpainBarcelona, Valladolid, Catalonia, Comunidad Valenciana, Madrid, Alicante, Granada94 41762846424
SwedenStockholm44356118013
TurkeyAnkara, Istanbul, Konya13 5312021410
UKLondon, Manchester, Cambridgeshire25 15062178920

Data in the table were collected from the websites www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019, www.worldometers.info/coronavirus, and https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus using information updated on March 31, 2020.

Fig. 1

Practice patterns among expert endourologists during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Data for the 60 participants from 20 different countries interested in urolithiasis who were included in the study survey.a Data in the table were collected from the websites www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus-2019, www.worldometers.info/coronavirus, and https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus using information updated on March 31, 2020. Practice patterns among expert endourologists during the COVID-19 pandemic. The majority of the experts (89.4%) tended to change their treatment strategy for an emergency patient with COVID-19 by planning an elective intervention following drainage of the collecting system; however, 10.6% continued to perform stone removal procedures in these cases. Some 43% of respondents continued to use a surgical mask as before the pandemic, whereas 17% did not perform surgery. Regarding eye protection, 25.5% started using goggles, 21.3% were already using goggles, and 34% did not shift to the use of goggles as part of their pandemic response. Among the respondents, 55.3% and 39.8% changed their elective surgical treatment approach after COVID-19 by a rate of 90–100% and 75–89%, respectively. Only 6.4% continued as before the pandemic. From an anesthesiology point of view, routine thorax computed tomography (CT) was requested 24 h before surgery by 27.7% of the experts, whereas, 61.7% requested thorax CT in the case of COVID-19 suspicion. Some 34% of the respondents preferred spinal anesthesia instead of general anesthesia, whereas 17% continued with spinal anesthesia as used before the pandemic (Fig. 1C), possibly because of the well-known safety of spinal anesthesia in stone surgery [3]. Unless contraindicated, we think that endourologists may prefer regional anesthesia during the COVID-19 pandemic, depending on their hospital conditions. Nearly half of the respondents (48.9%) stated that COVID-19 patients have been hospitalized in their departments, with approximately 40% taking an active role in evaluating respiratory symptoms in these patients (Fig. 1D). Therefore, it is obvious that although not specializing in the management of contagious diseases, all health care staff including doctors specializing in other disciplines have been obliged to deal with the pandemic. More than 85% of the participants reported a decrease of >50% in the workload of outpatient clinics. Routine treatment protocols for stone management were reported as altered by 91.3% of the experts. Changes in routine treatment protocols were further investigated in the questionnaire for certain clinical situations. For management of stones of <2 cm and 2–3 cm in size, 31.9% and 27.6% of the participants, respectively, stated that they would prefer a conservative approach until the pandemic settles. In addition, approximately two-thirds stated that they would postpone any auxiliary procedure because of the COVID-19 pandemic and 51% stated that they would discharge patients on the same day or within 24 h postoperatively. Another important aspect is emergency department admission of stone patients. Emergency physicians encounter stone patients with more severe conditions such as colic pain, acute renal failure, and pyelonephritis. The survey outlined that emergency department management of stone patients was also altered in more than 90% of cases during this period. Although the approach to stone patients in the emergency department was the same as before according to 6.4% of the experts, 55.3% began to accept cases from another COVID-19 area at the same emergency department, 25.5% accepted emergent urolithiasis cases in a newly organized space in the hospital, and 10.6% did not accept COVID-19 cases at all. Some 2% of the respondents referred emergent urolithiasis cases to other specialized COVID-19 centers. While timely management of these cases in the emergency department is crucial, clinical controversies arise if these patients are also suspicious for COVID-19. A possible scenario of a patient presenting to the emergency department with severe colic pain, fever, and cough would be a real dilemma for physicians. In the survey, nearly 90% of the participants stated that they would change the treatment strategy for an emergency case when the patient is positive for COVID-19. Therefore, clinical algorithms for cases presenting with renal obstruction, urinary tract infection, and acute renal failure would be helpful (Fig. 2 ). Changes in sterilization strategies during the COVID-19 pandemic were also included in the questionnaire: only 34.8% of the respondents did change their routine strategy for sterilization. This may be because of either a lack of knowledge on the risk of urine-based dissemination of viral RNA or a lack of modification of sterilization strategies in hospitals in the short time immediately after the first case report on COVID-19.
Fig. 2

Treatment algorithm for urinary stone patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. UTI = urinary tract infection; qSOFA = quick sepsis-related organ failure assessment.

Treatment algorithm for urinary stone patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. UTI = urinary tract infection; qSOFA = quick sepsis-related organ failure assessment. In many European countries, the pandemic started more than 3 wk ago and has gained momentum, and our survey was carried out during this critical period. When faced with such an unexpected situation, urologists, like other physicians, tend to use all of the resources available in their web-based environment, such as European Association of Urology COVID-19 resources for urologists, the American Urological Association coronavirus disease 2019 information center, and social media. The COVID-19 pandemic has led to significant changes in the practice patterns of endourologists for the management of urinary stone disease. Given the risk of novel viral pandemics in the future, the endourology community should be aware of possible alterations in clinical practice. Clinical algorithms may serve as a useful guide in adapting to these changes in time and in managing patients with urinary calculi safely and successfully. The authors have nothing to disclose.
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1.  Clinical Characteristics of 138 Hospitalized Patients With 2019 Novel Coronavirus-Infected Pneumonia in Wuhan, China.

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3.  Urology practice during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Review 3.  Scoping review: hotspots for COVID-19 urological research: what is being published and from where?

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4.  Patient's Fear of Being Infected, Another Complication of COVID-19 Outbreak: A Lesson Learned from a Case of Life-Threatening Urolithiasis.

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5.  Impact of COVID-19 on surgical emergencies: nationwide analysis.

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6.  The impact of COVID-19 outbreak on urolithiasis emergency department admissions, hospitalizations and clinical management in central Italy: a multicentric analysis.

Authors:  M Antonucci; S M Recupero; V Marzio; M De Dominicis; F Pinto; N Foschi; L Di Gianfrancesco; P Bassi; M Ragonese
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7.  How does the COVID-19 pandemic affect the preoperative evaluation and anesthesia applied for urinary stones? EULIS eCORE-IAU multicenter collaborative cohort study.

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8.  Variations in the Number of Patients Presenting With Andrological Problems During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic and the Possible Reasons for These Variations: A Multicenter Study.

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10.  Modifications regarding diagnostic approach and therapeutic management of urinary stones' disorders during COVID-19 pandemic.

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