Liliana Vasquez1, Claudia Sampor2, Gabriela Villanueva2, Essy Maradiegue3, Mercedes Garcia-Lombardi4, Wendy Gomez-García5, Florencia Moreno6, Rosdali Diaz3, Andrea M Cappellano7, Carlos Andres Portilla8, Beatriz Salas9, Evelinda Nava10, Silvia Brizuela11, Soledad Jimenez12, Ximena Espinoza13, Pascale Yola Gassant14, Karina Quintero15, Soad Fuentes-Alabi16, Thelma Velasquez17, Ligia Fu18, Yessika Gamboa19, Juan Quintana20, Mariela Castiglioni21, Cesar Nuñez22, Arturo Moreno23, Sandra Luna-Fineman24, Silvana Luciani25, Guillermo Chantada26. 1. Pan American Health Organization, Lima, Perú; Centro de Investigación de Medicina de Precision, Universidad de San Martin de Porres, Lima, Peru. 2. Oncology Unit, Hospital JP Garrahan, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 3. Pediatric Oncology Department, Instituto Nacional de Enfermedades Neoplasicas, Lima, Peru. 4. Oncology Unit, Hospital de Niños Ricardo Gutierrez, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 5. Oncology Unit, Hospital Infantil Dr Robert Reid Cabral, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. 6. Oncopediatric National Program, National Cancer Institute, Health Ministry, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 7. IOP-GRAACC-UNIFESP, São Paulo, Brazil. 8. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, Centro Médico Imbanaco Pediatric Department, Universidad Del Valle, Cali, Colombia. 9. Pediatric Oncology Unit, Hospital del Niño Manuel Ascencio Villarroel, Cercado, Cochabamba, Bolivia. 10. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, Hospital de Niños Jesus Garcia Coello, Punto Fijo, Venezuela. 11. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, Instituto de Prevision Social (HCIPS), Asuncion, Paraguay. 12. Pediatric Oncology Unit, Hospital Solca Nucleo de Loja, Loja, Ecuador. 13. Oncology Unit, Hospital de Niños Dr Roberto del Rio PINDA, Santiago, Chile. 14. Pediatric Oncology Unit, Hôpital Saint-Damien, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 15. Pediatric Oncology Unit, Children's Hospital Dr Jose Renan Esquivel, Panama city, Panama. 16. Pediatric Oncology Department, Hospital Nacional de Niños Benjamin Bloom, Fundación Ayudame a Vivir, El Salvador city, El Salvador. 17. Oncology Department, Unidad Nacional de Oncologia Pediatrica, Guatemala City, Guatemala. 18. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, Hospital Escuela de Tegucigalpa, Tegucigalpa, Honduras. 19. Oncology Unit, National Children's Hospital, San José, Costa Rica. 20. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, Clinica Las Condes, Santiago, Chile. 21. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Center, Hospital Pereira Rossell, Montevideo, Uruguay. 22. Children's Cancer Hospital, Division of Pediatrics, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA. 23. Hospital Universitario de Puebla, Puebla, Mexico. 24. Hematology/Oncology/Stem Cell Transplantation, Children's Hospital Colorado, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA. 25. Unit of Noncommunicable Diseases, Department of Noncommunicable Diseases and Mental Health, Pan American Health Organization, Washington, DC, USA. 26. Precision Medicine Coordination, Hospital JP Garrahan, Buenos Aires, Argentina; National Scientific and Technical Research Council, Buenos Aires C1245AAL, Argentina; Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Barcelona, Spain. Electronic address: gchantada@yahoo.com.
Although previous studies have suggested that the complications and mortality rate related to COVID-19 are substantially lower in the paediatric population, it is reasonable to consider that children with underlying conditions such as cancer will be at increased risk of severe disease.2, 3 Some reports have examined the impact of COVID-19 in children with cancer; in all cases no deaths or disease-related complications have been reported.4, 5, 6 In order to prevent the rapid spread of the virus as seen in many European countries, most Latin American countries implemented early epidemiological actions with social distancing, interruptions of commercial activities, transportation, and schooling. Preparation for the pandemic throughout Latin America, in terms of hospital capacity, human resources, and testing capacity is, however, heterogeneous. In this scenario, there is emerging concern about the collateral effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on access to diagnosis and treatment in children with cancer. In response to this problem, the global paediatric oncology community has summarised some of the anticipated challenges.To examine the potential impact of COVID-19 on the management of children with cancer in Latin America, we did a cross-sectional survey of paediatric onco-haematologists in April 12–19, 2020, early in the spread of the outbreak in the region (appendix p 1). The survey was electronically distributed through the Latin American Society of Pediatric Oncology (SLAOP) email list and St Jude Global regional partners. Additionally, SLAOP's national delegates for each country contacted their centres for an increased response and reviewed the responses from their countries for validation before analysis.453 paediatric onco-haematologists (267 faculty members, 142 medical directors, and 44 residents from public and private institutions) from 20 countries were surveyed (appendix p 2). Most participants reported that chemotherapy was administered for newly diagnosed (429 [95%]) and active ongoing (441 [97%]) treatment cases. However, indefinite postponement or delay of surveillance consultations (405 [89%]), outpatient procedures (264 [58%]), cancer surgeries (206 [45%]), radiotherapy schedules (122 [33%]), outpatient consultations (119 [26%]), stem-cell transplantation (173 [73%]) and palliative care (87 [19%]) were reported. In 36% of cases, modification of chemotherapy regimens was required because of shortage of drugs (figure
; appendix p 3).
Figure
Proportion of suspensions or alterations to paediatric cancer treatment by country
(A) Chemotherapy modification due to shortage of drugs. (B) Indefinite postponement or delay of cancer surgery. (C) Indefinite postponement or delay of radiotherapy sessions. Countries shaded grey were not included.
Proportion of suspensions or alterations to paediatric cancer treatment by country(A) Chemotherapy modification due to shortage of drugs. (B) Indefinite postponement or delay of cancer surgery. (C) Indefinite postponement or delay of radiotherapy sessions. Countries shaded grey were not included.Multivariate logistic regression revealed that the type of oncology hospital, number of paediatric onco-haematologists in a centre, travel restrictions, COVID-19 incidence rate and fatality rate (appendix p 4), and national health-care expenditure were independent factors for any type of discontinuation of or modification to oncological therapy in children (appendix pp 5–6).Nearly 60% of respondents reported a decrease in their paediatric onco-haematology staff because of COVID-19infection or quarantine. Half of the surveyed respondents reported that their centres did not provide a platform for telemedicine consultations, although non-professional social media channels were used. Shortage of blood products was reported by 79% of respondents, which was significantly more frequent in countries with travel restrictions, high COVID-19 incidence rates, and a health-care expenditure less than 7% of GDP (appendix pp 5–6). In countries with the highest health-care expenditure and lowest COVID-19 incidence and case-fatality rates, physicians stated that they perceived the pandemic would not affect children with cancer, probably due to greater confidence in their health-care systems (appendix pp 5–6). Facility funding, participants position, and tests per million population at risk were not independently associated with any outcome (appendix pp 5–6).Almost all participants (99%) reported that their hospitals are implementing social distancing measures, suspension of functions of non-essential personnel and students, reorganisation of teams to reduce exposure, and implementation of educational materials that are aligned to recently published international recommendations (appendix p 7). However, some participants expressed concerns about the lack of governance of health-care systems overwhelmed with COVID-19, poor availability of personal protective equipment, issues in the shipment and processing of pathology samples (by flow cytometry and for minimal residual disease assessment), and delays in access to diagnosis in new cases, mostly in countries where treatment is centralised (appendix p 7).The major strength of this study is its high participation rate and geographical coverage, with responses from all Latin American countries with official paediatric oncology programmes. However, the main limitation was the imbalanced number of participants between countries, making it difficult to compare across countries.Our data suggest that even in this early epidemiological phase where health-care systems have not been substantially affected in Latin America, COVID-19 has already affected the care of children with cancer. In addition to the potential risk of severe disease by COVID-19 in these patients, prognosis could be negatively affected because of alterations to paediatric oncology management. As the pandemic evolves and the burden on health-care systems increases, these disruptions might be even more severe if preventive actions are not taken.
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