Literature DB >> 32500134

The influence of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on esophagogastric cancer services: an international survey of esophagogastric surgeons.

Sivesh K Kamarajah1, Sheraz R Markar2,3, Pritam Singh4, Ewen A Griffiths5.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Several guidelines to guide clinical practice among esophagogastric surgeons during the COVID-19 pandemic were produced. However, none provide reflection of current service provision. This international survey aimed to clarify the changes observed in esophageal and gastric cancer management and surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic.
METHODS: An online survey covering key areas for esophagogastric cancer services, including staging investigations and oncological and surgical therapy before and during (at two separate time-points-24th March 2020 and 18th April 2020) the COVID-19 pandemic were developed.
RESULTS: A total of 234 respondents from 225 centers and 49 countries spanning six continents completed the first round of the online survey, of which 79% (n = 184) completed round 2. There was variation in the availability of staging investigations ranging from 26.5% for endoscopic ultrasound to 62.8% for spiral computed tomography scan. Definitive chemoradiotherapy was offered in 14.8% (adenocarcinoma) and 47.0% (squamous cell carcinoma) of respondents and significantly increased by almost three-fold and two-fold, respectively, in both round 1 and 2. There were uncertainty and heterogeneity surrounding prioritization of patients undergoing cancer resections. Of the surgeons symptomatic with COVID-19, only 40.2% (33/82) had routine access to COVID-19 polymerase chain reaction testing for staff. Of those who had testing available (n = 33), only 12.1% (4/33) had tested positive.
CONCLUSIONS: These data highlight management challenges and several practice variations in caring for patients with esophagogastric cancers. Therefore, there is a need for clear consistent guidelines to be in place in the event of a further pandemic to ensure a standardized level of oncological care for patients with esophagogastric cancers. © Crown copyright 2020.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; esophageal cancer; esophageal surgery; gastric cancer; pandemic

Year:  2020        PMID: 32500134      PMCID: PMC7314222          DOI: 10.1093/dote/doaa054

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dis Esophagus        ISSN: 1120-8694            Impact factor:   3.429


INTRODUCTION

The World Health Organization declared a pandemic of coronavirus disease SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) on 11 March 2020. Rapid spread of COVID-19 heavily affected healthcare systems worldwide, which led to vast and widespread changes in hospitals’ structure to plan for increased intensive care unit (ICU) capacity to cope with the pandemic. As a result, this pandemic not only affected COVID-19 patients, but also impacted the entire healthcare system including the provision of care for patients with cancer and surgery., Recent reports suggest an increased risk for cancer patients to develop severe complications when infected by COVID-19, with a similar pattern observed for those treated with surgery or chemotherapy. Pursuing oncological care exposes both healthcare professionals and patients to become infected by COVID-19. However, the inability to receive oncological and/or surgical care seems to be an equally important prognostic threat for cancer patients. The aggressive disease biology of esophageal and gastric cancer requires the continuation of oncological therapy during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, thoughtful strategies need to be developed to support healthcare professionals in clinical decision-making and ensure resources are allocated appropriately. This international survey aimed to clarify the changes observed in esophageal and gastric cancer management during the COVID-19 pandemic. This was performed by surveying international specialist surgeons with a focus on how the pandemic has affected their cancer services and how they have adapted their service with respect to: (1) cancer staging pathways, (2) multidisciplinary team (MDT)/tumor board meetings, (3) oncological therapy, (4) operative intervention, (5) preoperative COVID-19 testing and (6) effect of the pandemic on esophagogastric cancer surgeons and redeployment.

METHODS

Survey

An online survey was developed through a consensus process involving a core group of investigators (Appendix I). The questionnaire was designed to cover a range of key areas for esophageal and gastric cancer, including staging investigations and oncological and surgical therapy before and during (at two separate time-points) the COVID-19 pandemic. This survey was circulated to all members of the international esophageal and gastric associations and study groups: Australian and New Zealand Gastric and Oesophageal Surgery Association, Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgeons (AUGIS), Dutch Cancer Audit, European Society of Diseases of Esophagus (ESDE), Gastric Cancer Surgery Trials Reported Outcomes Standardisation (GASTROS), International Society for Disease of Esophagus and Oesophagogastric Anastomosis Audit using Google Forms (Google LLC, Menlo Park, CA, USA). Only consultant or attending surgeons performing esophageal and gastric resections were invited to complete the online survey via email. The survey consisted of two rounds with 40 questions (Appendix II and III) on baseline characteristics, the local impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on esophageal and gastric surgery (i.e. MDT meeting, availability of staging investigations, choice of oncological therapy, surgical resection and ICU capacity) and statements about prioritization of resection in the current era of the COVID-19 pandemic to gain a consensus. Each statement had to be appraised using the ‘prioritization of patients for cancer surgery’ from the National Health Service England options: priority level 1 (curative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of success), priority level 2 (curative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of success), priority level 3 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of >1 year of life extension), priority level 4 (curative therapy with a low [0–15%] chance of success or noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of >1 year life extension), priority level 5 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of palliation/temporary tumor control, but <1 year life extension) and priority level 6 (noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of palliation or temporary tumor control and <1 year life extension). The first round of the survey was conducted in the last week of March 2020 (Fig. 1A) and the second round was repeated in the last 2 weeks of April 2020 (Fig. 1B). Nonrespondents were sent two reminder emails. Respondents were asked to register their name and institution to prevent overlap of members between the same hospitals.
Fig. 1

Global map demonstrating countries participating in round 1 and 2 of the survey and total COVID-19 cases per capita globally. (A) Total COVID-19 incidence on 24th March 2020. (B) Total COVID-19 incidence on 18th April 2020. *These international maps demonstrating total COVID-19 confirmed cases per capita were obtained from the Our World in Data from https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-data.

Global map demonstrating countries participating in round 1 and 2 of the survey and total COVID-19 cases per capita globally. (A) Total COVID-19 incidence on 24th March 2020. (B) Total COVID-19 incidence on 18th April 2020. *These international maps demonstrating total COVID-19 confirmed cases per capita were obtained from the Our World in Data from https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-data.

Definitions

Critical care capacity was defined using the CRITCON level, which was originally developed in 2009 by the North West London Critical Care Network in response to the H1N1 influenza pandemic. This grades ICU capacity into the following levels (CRITCON 0–4, corresponding to ‘business as usual’, ‘normal winter’, ‘unprecedented’, ‘last resort’ and ‘triage’). Data for total confirmed cases per capita were derived from the ‘Our World in Data’, which is a platform for global data on a broad range of conditions. Data on total confirmed COVID-19 cases per capita were grouped into tertiles (i.e. low [L-CoV], medium [M-CoV] and high [H-CoV]) derived from the database.

Statistical analysis

Data analysis was performed using R Foundation Statistical software (R 3.2.2) (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria). Data were reported as number with percentage or as median with interquartile range. Categorical variables were compared using the chi-squared test. Non-normally distributed data were analyzed using the Mann–Whitney U test. Stratified sensitivity analyses were performed based on total confirmed cases per capita for each country on 24th March 2020 (round 1) and 18th April 2020 (round 2). All statistical significance was considered as two-tailed P-value <0.05.

RESULTS

Demographics of survey participants and centers

A total of 234 respondents from 225 centers and 49 countries spanning six continents completed the first round of the online survey (Supplementary data, Fig. S1). Baseline demographics of respondents are presented in Supplementary data, Table S1. Most respondents were upper gastrointestinal or esophagogastric surgeons (n = 158, 67.5%) working in an academic center (n = 217, 92.7%). The majority of centers had 501–1,000 hospital beds (n = 91, 38.9%) and 36.8% (n = 86) of centers had 20 to 50 hospital ICU beds. In round 1, 81.6% had patients in their center with COVID-19 and 29.9% of centers had >51 inpatients with COVID-19. Majority of centers were at CRITCON level 2 ‘unprecedented’ (n = 96, 41.0%), followed by CRITCON level 1 ‘normal winter’ (n = 64, 27.4%) and CRITCON level 0 ‘business as usual’ (n = 38, 16.2%). Baseline characteristics of COVID-19-related demographics are presented in Table 1. Of the 234 respondents from round 1, 184 respondents (79%) completed round 2 of the survey as presented in Supplementary data, Table S1.
Table 1

Baseline characteristics of COVID-19, cancer protocols, and multidisciplinary team among respondents stratified in round 1 (n = 234) and 2 (n = 184) of the survey

Round 1Round 2 P-value
COVID-19
COVID-19 patientsNo34 (14.5)29 (15.8)0.2
Yes191 (81.6)153 (83.2)
Unknown9 (3.8)2 (1.1)
Number of COVID-19 patients0–1067 (28.6)40 (21.7)<0.001
11–2033 (14.1)10 (5.4)
21–3019 (8.1)10 (5.4)
31–4018 (7.7)10 (5.4)
41–508 (3.4)49 (26.6)
>5170 (29.9)59 (32.0)
Unknown19 (8.1)6 (3.2)
CRITCONLevel 0 (normal)38 (16.2)22 (12.0)0.5
Level 1 (bad winter)64 (27.4)52 (28.3)
Level 2 (unprecedented)96 (41.0)87 (47.3)
Level 3 (full stretch)30 (12.8)21 (11.4)
Level 4 (last resort)6 (2.6)2 (1.1)
Cancer protocols and MDT
ProtocolNo29 (12.4)16 (8.7)0.5
Yes—local115 (49.1)89 (48.4)
Yes—national56 (23.9)53 (28.8)
Yes—local and national34 (14.5)26 (14.1)
MDTNo—limited numbers in the room87 (37.2)51 (27.7)0.1
No—they have had to be stopped38 (16.2)26 (14.1)
No—virtual MDT (video linkage)85 (36.3)89 (48.4)
Yes—face-to-face meetings24 (10.3)18 (9.8)
Staging modalities
Diagnostic endoscopyAvailable70 (29.9)80 (43.5)0.015
Limited or delayed availability142 (60.7)92 (50.0)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic22 (9.4)12 (6.5)
Therapeutic endoscopy (EMR/ESD/stenting)Available78 (33.3)75 (40.8)0.2
Limited or delayed availability134 (57.3)89 (48.4)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic22 (9.4)20 (10.9)
Spiral computed tomography scanAvailable147 (62.8)144 (78.3)0.002
Limited or delayed availability82 (35.0)39 (21.2)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic5 (2.1)1 (0.5)
Endoscopic ultrasoundAvailable62 (26.5)52 (28.3)0.7
Limited or delayed availability118 (50.4)96 (52.2)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic54 (23.1)36 (19.6)
Position emission topographyAvailable116 (49.6)119 (64.7)0.006
Limited or delayed availability86 (36.8)43 (23.4)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic32 (13.7)22 (12.0)
Staging laparoscopyAvailable91 (38.9)85 (46.2)0.2
Limited or delayed availability96 (41.0)61 (33.2)
Unavailable during COVID-19 pandemic47 (20.1)38 (20.7)
Cancer surgery
PrioritizationNo39 (16.7)26 (14.1)0.5
Yes—local protocol149 (63.7)114 (62.0)
Yes—national protocol46 (19.7)44 (23.9)
ResectionConsultants are assisted by other consultants (dual operating)94 (40.2)95 (51.6)0.002
Consultants are assisted by trainees105 (44.9)78 (42.4)
Consultants are training trainees9 (3.8)7 (3.8)
Resectional surgery has stopped26 (11.1)4 (2.2)
Postoperative management
Postoperative ICUNever15 (6.4)13 (7.1)0.3
Routinely106 (45.3)96 (52.2)
Selectively113 (48.3)75 (40.8)
Postoperative destination changes during COVID-19No61 (26.1)80 (43.5)<0.001
Yes—consider operating or send patients to a different hospital6 (2.6)11 (6.0)
Yes—consider or send patients back to the ward or alternatives to ICU124 (53.0)77 (41.8)
Yes—operative surgery will be extremely rare43 (18.4)16 (8.7)
Perceived morbidity with COVID-19 in esophagogastric cancer patientsHigher morbidity, but similar mortality31 (13.2)23 (12.5)0.7
Higher mortality178 (76.1)142 (77.2)
Similar risks to usual9 (3.8)10 (5.4)
Unknown16 (6.8)9 (4.9)
Estimated postoperative COVID-19 infections in esophagogastric cancer patients[*]0%56 (30.4)
1–10%32 (17.4)
>10%14 (7.6)
Unknown82 (44.6)
Estimated major complications associated with COVID-19 infections in esophagogastric cancer patients[*]0%51 (27.7)
1–10%20 (10.9)
>10%35 (19.0)
Unknown78 (42.4)
Estimated 30-day mortality associated with COVID-19 infections in esophagogastric cancer patients[*]0%53 (28.8)
1–10%20 (10.9)
>10%33 (17.9)
Unknown78 (42.4)

*These questions were only asked in round 2 of the survey.

Baseline characteristics of COVID-19, cancer protocols, and multidisciplinary team among respondents stratified in round 1 (n = 234) and 2 (n = 184) of the survey *These questions were only asked in round 2 of the survey.

Cancer protocols and MDT

In round 1, 88.6% of centers had standardized protocols available for the treatment of esophagogastric cancer patients during COVID-19 and these increased to 92.3% in round 2 (Table 1). Protocols were based on national guidelines in 23.9% and 28.8% of centers in round 1 and 2 respectively. There was a substantial increase in virtual MDT meetings from 36.3% to 48.4% from round 1 to 2, respectively (Table 1). In stratified analyses, rates of virtual MDT among centers were significantly higher in countries with M-CoV and H-CoV incidence cases compared to L-CoV incidence cases in both round 1 (47.4% vs. 37.7% vs. 24.1%, P < 0.001) and 2 (49.4% vs. 51.2% vs. 34.8%, P < 0.001) (Supplementary data, Table S2).

Staging investigations

There was variation in the availability of staging investigations in round 1 ranging from 26.5% for endoscopic ultrasound to 62.8% for spiral computed tomography (CT) scan (Fig. 2). Round 2 demonstrated significant increases in rates of diagnostic endoscopy (29.9% vs. 43.5%, P = 0.015), spiral CT scan (62.8% vs. 78.3%, P = 0.002) and position emission topography scan (49.6% vs. 64.7%, P = 0.006) (Fig. 2; Table 1) in comparison to round 1. Limited variations were observed in stratified analyses by total COVID-19 cases between rounds (Supplementary data, Table S3).
Fig. 2

Distribution of staging investigations availability across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Distribution of staging investigations availability across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Oncological therapy

Esophageal adenocarcinoma

Standard pre-COVID-19 oncological therapies available for potentially curative esophageal adenocarcinoma included neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NCS) (n = 163, 69.1%) or chemoradiotherapy (NCRS) (n = 152, 64.4%) (Fig. 3A). Definitive chemoradiotherapy (DCRT) was offered in 14.8% of centers and significantly increased during the COVID-19 pandemic by almost three-fold in both round 1 and 2 (39.7% and 38.0%, P < 0.001). Stratified analyses demonstrated higher rates of adoption of DCRT in H-CoV centers in both round 1 and 2 compared to standard for esophageal adenocarcinoma (Supplementary data, Fig. S2, Table S4).
Fig. 3

Distribution of oncological therapy available for esophageal cancers across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. (A) Esophageal adenocarcinoma. (B) Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. (C) Overall changes to treatment strategies in esophagogastric cancer management to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Distribution of oncological therapy available for esophageal cancers across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. (A) Esophageal adenocarcinoma. (B) Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. (C) Overall changes to treatment strategies in esophagogastric cancer management to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma

Standard pre-COVID-19 oncological therapies available for potentially curative esophageal squamous cell carcinoma included NCRS (n = 188, 80.3%) and DCRT (n = 110, 47.0%) (Fig. 3B). DCRT was offered in 47.0% of centers and significantly increased during the COVID-19 pandemic in both round 1 and 2 (64.5% and 73.9%, P < 0.001). Stratified analyses demonstrated significantly higher rates of adoption of DCRT and H-CoV centers in both round 1 and 2 compared to standard for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (Supplementary data, Fig. S2, Table S4).

Timing of surgery after neoadjuvant therapy

For timing of surgery after neoadjuvant therapy as standard pre-COVID practice, the majority of centers offered surgery 6 to 8 weeks following neoadjuvant therapy (n = 132, 56.4%) and only 4.3% and 0.9% of centers offered surgery after 10 to 12 weeks and >12 weeks, respectively. However, there was a five-fold significant increase in centers offering surgery 10 to 12 weeks after neoadjuvant therapy in round 1 and 2 (26.5% vs. 21.7%, P < 0.001) (Table 2).
Table 2

Changes in oncological therapy for esophageal cancer among respondents stratified in round 1 (n = 234) and 2 (n = 184) of the survey

StandardRound 1Round 2 P-value
Esophageal adenocarcinoma
Definitive chemoradiotherapyNo199 (85.0)141 (60.3)114 (62.0)<0.001
Yes35 (15.0)93 (39.7)70 (38.0)
Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapyNo82 (35.0)124 (53.0)69 (37.5)<0.001
Yes152 (65.0)110 (47.0)115 (62.5)
Neoadjuvant chemotherapyNo73 (31.2)116 (49.6)60 (32.6)<0.001
Yes161 (68.8)118 (50.4)124 (67.4)
Surgery onlyNo161 (68.8)162 (69.2)109 (59.2)0.059
Yes73 (31.2)72 (30.8)75 (40.8)
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
Definitive chemoradiotherapyNo124 (53.0)83 (35.5)48 (26.1)<0.001
Yes110 (47.0)151 (64.5)136 (73.9)
Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapyNo46 (19.7)130 (55.6)70 (38.0)<0.001
Yes188 (80.3)104 (44.4)114 (62.0)
Neoadjuvant chemotherapyNo180 (76.9)193 (82.5)141 (76.6)0.2
Yes54 (23.1)41 (17.5)43 (23.4)
Surgery onlyNo181 (77.4)189 (80.8)140 (76.1)0.5
Yes53 (22.6)45 (19.2)44 (23.9)
Radical radiotherapyNo213 (91.0)197 (84.2)142 (77.2)<0.001
Yes21 (9.0)37 (15.8)42 (22.8)
Timing of surgery after neoadjuvant therapy
<6 weeks59 (25.2)24 (10.3)24 (13.0)<0.001
6–8 weeks132 (56.4)46 (19.7)69 (37.5)
8–10 weeks30 (12.8)51 (21.8)43 (23.4)
10–12 weeks10 (4.3)62 (26.5)40 (21.7)
>12 weeks2 (0.9)44 (18.8)8 (4.3)
Neoadjuvant therapy is unavailable1 (0.4)7 (3.0)0 (0)

Standard treatment was defined as oncological therapy offered to patients by their center prior to the SARS CoV-2 pandemic whereas in round 1 and round 2 focusses on oncological therapy used during the SARS CoV-2 pandemic. P-values in tables represent statistical testing across each variable.

Changes in oncological therapy for esophageal cancer among respondents stratified in round 1 (n = 234) and 2 (n = 184) of the survey Standard treatment was defined as oncological therapy offered to patients by their center prior to the SARS CoV-2 pandemic whereas in round 1 and round 2 focusses on oncological therapy used during the SARS CoV-2 pandemic. P-values in tables represent statistical testing across each variable.

Changes to overall treatment

Overall changes to curative treatment for esophagogastric cancers are displayed in Figure 3C. While 40.2% of respondents did not consider changes to overall treatment, 43.5% respondents considered extending timing from neoadjuvant therapy, 30.4% of respondents considered changing to DCRT and 21.0% considered offering neoadjuvant therapy for early stage cancers (i.e. T2N0 cancers). Despite these changes, when presented with case vignettes, majority of respondents favored proceeding with resection as planned or proceeding to surgery (Supplementary data, Fig. S3).

Perioperative cancer surgery

Surgical prioritization

Prioritization of cancer resections was based on a national protocol in 19.7% of centers in round 1 and 23.9% in round 2 (Table 1). There were no significant differences in stratified analyses by total cases of COVID-19 per capita (Supplementary data, Table S5). We also assessed factors used in prioritization of cancer resections. In round 1, patient fitness was ranked first by 35.0% of respondents and tumor stage was ranked first by 34.4% of respondents. There were no significant differences in proportion of respondents ranking both patient fitness and tumor stage first in round 2 (Fig. 4A). However, there was a significant increase in proportion of respondents ranking neoadjuvant timing as first from round 1 to round 2 (16.7% vs. 27.7%, P = 0.011). To assess variation in prioritization of esophagogastric cancer resections, respondents were asked to prioritize case vignettes (Fig. 4B). Overall, there were no significant differences in ranking between cases in round 1 and 2. Prioritization of resections was based on early stage cancers or good physical fitness.
Fig. 4

Distribution of ranking priority for esophagogastric cancer resections across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. (A) Prioritization factors. (B) Case vignettes. *For Figure 4B, the definition of each levels are as follows: level 1 (curative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of success); level 2 (curative therapy with an intermediate (15–50%) chance of success); level 3 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of >1 year of life extension); level 4 (curative therapy with a low [0–15%] chance of success or noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of >1 year life extension); level 5 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of palliation/temporary tumor control but <1 year life extension); and level 6 (noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of palliation or temporary tumor control and <1 year life extension).

Distribution of ranking priority for esophagogastric cancer resections across centers from round 1 and 2 of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. (A) Prioritization factors. (B) Case vignettes. *For Figure 4B, the definition of each levels are as follows: level 1 (curative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of success); level 2 (curative therapy with an intermediate (15–50%) chance of success); level 3 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of >1 year of life extension); level 4 (curative therapy with a low [0–15%] chance of success or noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of >1 year life extension); level 5 (noncurative therapy with a high [>50%] chance of palliation/temporary tumor control but <1 year life extension); and level 6 (noncurative therapy with an intermediate [15–50%] chance of palliation or temporary tumor control and <1 year life extension).

Routine COVID-19 testing of patients

Only 14.7% (n = 27) were not performing routine testing of patients, 6.0% (n = 11) used routine CT scanning only and 33.2% (n = 61) used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) swab testing only. H-CoV centers had significantly higher rates of PCR swab testing than L-CoV or M-CoV centers (48.8% vs. 13.0% vs. 35.5%, P = 0.001). In 32.1% of centers, there was a combination of either symptom assessment, use of CT scanning or PCR swab testing. COVID-19 PCR swab testing was available for centers in 92.2% of respondents. The COVID-19 PCR swab testing was available within 6 hours for centers in 36.4% of respondents, significantly quicker availability rates of in H-CoV centers compared to M-CoV and L-CoV (53.8% vs. 25.9% vs. 13.0%, P < 0.001) (Supplementary data, Table S5).

Location of resection

Most respondents (46.7%, n = 86) were performing cancer resections in the same hospital (usual theatres) while 27.7% (n = 51) were performing cancer resections in the same hospital but separate theatres and 12.5% (n = 23) were performing resections at separate COVID-19 cold/private sites. However, there were no significant differences in location of performing resection between total COVID-19 cases per capita (Supplementary data, Table S5).

Personal protective equipment

Of the respondents surveyed in round 2, 40.8% of respondents used personal protective equipment (PPE) for all resections and 44.6% only for those with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 patients. Only 14.7% of respondents did not use PPE. There were no significant differences in rates of PPE by total COVID-19 cases per capita across groups (Supplementary data, Table S5).

Resection approach

There was a significant increase toward dual consultant operating from round 1 to round 2 (40.2% vs. 51.6%, P = 0.002), which was significantly higher in H-CoV centers for round 1. However, this was not the case for round 2 as rates of dual consultant operating consistently increased across centers in countries with L-CoV, M-CoV and H-CoV case incidence (45.0% vs. 54.1% vs. 58.2%, P = 0.5) (Supplementary data, Table S5). In 52.2% (n = 96) of centers, there was still ongoing practice of minimally invasive surgery while only 12.0% (n = 22) and 12.5% (n = 23) were avoiding minimally invasive surgery in all or selected cases, respectively. In H-CoV centers, there was a significant reduction in the use of minimally invasive surgery in all cases compared to L-CoV or M-CoV (7.5% vs. 13.0% vs. 16.0%, P = 0.002).

Postoperative management

Postoperative destination

Among respondents in round 1, only 45.3% of respondents send patients to ICU routinely and 48.3% of respondents send patients to ICU selectively following esophagogastric cancer resections (Table 1). In regards to postoperative destination, 2.6% of respondents were considering sending patients to a different hospital postoperatively during the COVID-19 pandemic during round 1, which significantly increased to 6.0% during round 2 (P < 0.001) (Table 1). There were no significant differences in responses when stratified by total COVID-19 cases per capita (Supplementary data, Table S6).

Impact of COVID-19 and surgeons

In round 2, we surveyed the impact of COVID-19 on esophagogastric surgeons. Among surgeons, 44.6% (82/184) have been symptomatic with COVID-19. Of the surgeons symptomatic with COVID-19, only 40.2% (33/82) had routine access to COVID-19 PCR testing for staff. Of those who had testing available (n = 33), only 12.1% (4/33) had tested positive. Figure 3 illustrates redeployment of surgeons during the COVID-19 pandemic. While 67.9% remained in the same department, some 20.0% and 13.8% were redeployed to emergency department and HDU/ICU, respectively (Fig. 5).
Fig. 5

Distribution of redeployment of surgeons across centers from round 2 (n = 184) of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic stratified by total COVID-19 cases by low (L-CoV), middle (M-CoV) and high (H-CoV) groups.

Distribution of redeployment of surgeons across centers from round 2 (n = 184) of the survey during the COVID-19 pandemic stratified by total COVID-19 cases by low (L-CoV), middle (M-CoV) and high (H-CoV) groups.

DISCUSSION

This international cross-sectional survey across 234 respondents from 225 centers and 49 countries spanning six continents demonstrates a high level of variation in availability of staging investigations, oncological therapy, decision-making regarding prioritization of cancer resections during the COVID-19 pandemic and perioperative management in cancer resections. The main findings of this survey include: (1) wide adoption of DCRT for esophageal adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma; (2) uncertainty and heterogeneity surrounding prioritization of patients undergoing cancer resections; and (3) high rates (44.6%) of workforce symptomatic from COVID-19 likely to impact delivery of cancer services during a pandemic. These data highlight the management challenges and several practice variations in caring for patients with esophagogastric cancers. Dissemination of data from this survey will improve understanding of current international clinical practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. Further, this study has identified the need for clear consistent national or international guidelines to be in place in the event of a further pandemic to ensure a standardized level of oncological care for patients with esophagogastric cancers. This survey has demonstrated broad shifts in oncological management of patients with both esophageal adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma toward use of DCRT. This likely reflects the uncertainty related to surgical capacity owing to the lack of HDU or ICU capacity. In the absence of robust randomized trial data, DCRT and neoadjuvant treatment followed by surgery have equivalent survival outcomes for esophageal squamous cell carcinoma., The evidence base for DCRT is less strong for esophageal adenocarcinoma, but reasonable outcomes were seen for this group in the SCOPE1 trial., In this survey, there are also broad shifts to delaying time to surgery following neoadjuvant therapy, which could potentially affect prognosis. A meta-analysis of 13 studies involving 15,086 patients showed an interval longer than 7 to 8 weeks between the end of neoadjuvant CRT and surgery was significantly associated with an improved pathological complete response rate, but lower 2-year and 5-year overall survival. The effect of delay after NCS is less certain, however, a recent US National Cancer Database study demonstrated that an additional delay to surgery by at least 4 weeks may not have a significant impact on patient survival or cancer progression. In addition, data presented for esophageal and gastric cancers suggest that surgery could be potentially safe to postpone up to 28 and 30 weeks after diagnosis in patients receiving neoadjuvant treatment. The ongoing NeoRes-II randomized controlled trial evaluating timing of surgery after NCRS will provide level 1 evidence.

Cancer resection prioritization

There is a concern that limited HDU/ICU bed availability and the risk of postoperative SARS-CoV-2 infection will severely limit or preclude surgical intervention for esophagogastric patients. Therefore, prioritization of cancer resection patients most likely to benefit and be at low risk of complications is important. Several groups have developed guidelines and prioritization models, including AUGIS, ESDE, Thoracic Surgery Outcomes Research Network and other groups specifically for this patient group. The medically necessary, time-sensitive (MeNTS) score has been developed and systematically scores several factors (procedure timing and resource use, disease urgency and patient risk factors) for prioritizing surgical procedures across all surgical specialties. This scoring system aims to triage MeNTS procedures, and appropriately weighs individual patient risks with the ethical necessity of optimizing resource allocation during the pandemic. This approach is applicable across a broad range of hospital settings (academic and community, urban and rural) and may be able to inform case triage as operating room capacity resumes once the acute phase of the pandemic subsides. This survey highlights the prioritization of cancer resections by centers is based on patient fitness and tumor stage. In our survey, surgeons appear to prioritize advanced tumors (i.e. high-risk nodal disease) due to high risk of disease progression. Treatment decisions are further complicated by the fact most of the patients with esophagogastric cancer are in a ‘high-risk’ category for poor outcomes if they developed COVID-19 (elderly, cardiorespiratory comorbidities and obesity). In addition, the surgery (especially thoracotomy) can both impair lung function (i.e. one lung isolation, postoperative pain and pneumonia) and potentially expose clinical teams to aerosolized viral load (bronchoscopy, double-lumen endotracheal tube placement and endoscopy).

Screening and protection in COVID-19

Due to the high prevalence of pulmonary complications following esophagogastric surgery, and the implications of postoperative COVID-19 infection, rates of asymptomatic infection, there is a convincing case for accurate preoperative testing of these patients prior to surgery. The Corona Virus Global Surgical Collaborative recommend performing routine COVID-19 testing for all patients who will undergo a surgical or interventional endoscopic procedure in institutions seeing high volumes of COVID-19 patients. In addition, American College of Surgeons advised to wait for the results of COVID-19 testing in patients who may be infected, but no further recommendation surrounding cancellation or postponement of surgery in patients testing positive. Routine screening may include symptomatic assessment via telephone triage several days before elective cancer surgery for risk stratification and preoperative CT scanning owing to high sensitivity up to 97%.

Minimally invasive surgery

Although previous research has shown that laparoscopy can lead to aerosolization of blood-borne viruses, no specific robust research has been published in COVID-19 patients. Current available guidance from the Intercollegiate Royal College of Surgeons and Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons offer inconsistent guidance that can be open to interpretation on performing minimally invasive surgery. This is reflected in this survey where 24.5% of respondents stopping minimally invasive surgery in all or selected cases.

Surgical workforce

In our survey, 44.6% have been symptomatic with COVID-19. Of the surgeons symptomatic with COVID-19, only 40.2% (33/82) had routine access to testing for staff. Of those who had testing available (n = 33), only 12.1% (4/33) had tested positive. Esophageal surgeons have a duty to self-isolate if they develop COVID symptoms and get appropriate testing to avoid spreading the virus to other staff and patients in the hospital.

Strengths and limitations

This survey has several strengths including its large sample size and that it performed two rounds capturing changes during the pandemic. In addition, a wide range of countries and continents, with differing COVID-19 disease incidence were captured. This allowed stratified analyses to be performed for total cases per capita to gain extra insight into the uncertainty in current practice among esophageal surgeons. By its nature, this survey will have limitations. First, despite widely advertising this survey via multiple specialist organizations and social media, it is possible that selection bias has occurred. Our survey was specifically designed for surgeons and as such the thoughts of patients, oncologists or other healthcare professionals involved in the treatment of esophagogastric surgery have not been elicited. Second, this study did not collect specific patient outcomes for esophageal and gastric cancers surgery and COVID-19. However, research from collaborative groups such as CovidSurg and PanSurg collaborative will provide real-time data to further supplement data from this survey. Finally, this study attempted to stratify current practices by total confirmed cases per capita, but this is likely limited by testing rates available in each country.

CONCLUSION

In summary, this survey highlights the management challenges and several practice variations in caring for patients with esophagogastric cancers. Dissemination of data from this survey will improve understanding of current international clinical practice during the COVID-19 pandemic. Further, this study has identified the need for clear, consistent national or international guidelines to be in place in the event of a further pandemic to ensure a standardized level of oncological care for patients with esophagogastric cancers. Click here for additional data file.
  24 in total

1.  How Coronavirus Disease 2019 Outbreak Is Impacting Colorectal Cancer Patients in Italy: A Long Shadow Beyond Infection.

Authors:  Gianluca Pellino; Antonino Spinelli
Journal:  Dis Colon Rectum       Date:  2020-06       Impact factor: 4.585

2.  Definitive Chemoradiotherapy Compared to Neoadjuvant Chemoradiotherapy With Esophagectomy for Locoregional Esophageal Cancer: National Population-based Cohort Study.

Authors:  Sivesh K Kamarajah; Alexander W Phillips; George B Hanna; Donald Low; Sheraz R Markar
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 12.969

3.  Surgical smoke may be a biohazard to surgeons performing laparoscopic surgery.

Authors:  Seock Hwan Choi; Tae Gyun Kwon; Sung Kwang Chung; Tae-Hwan Kim
Journal:  Surg Endosc       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 4.584

4.  Long-term results and recurrence patterns from SCOPE-1: a phase II/III randomised trial of definitive chemoradiotherapy +/- cetuximab in oesophageal cancer.

Authors:  T Crosby; C N Hurt; S Falk; S Gollins; J Staffurth; R Ray; J A Bridgewater; J I Geh; D Cunningham; J Blazeby; R Roy; T Maughan; G Griffiths; S Mukherjee
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2017-02-14       Impact factor: 7.640

5.  Medically Necessary, Time-Sensitive Procedures: Scoring System to Ethically and Efficiently Manage Resource Scarcity and Provider Risk During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Vivek N Prachand; Ross Milner; Peter Angelos; Mitchell C Posner; John J Fung; Nishant Agrawal; Valluvan Jeevanandam; Jeffrey B Matthews
Journal:  J Am Coll Surg       Date:  2020-04-09       Impact factor: 6.113

6.  COVID-19 guidance for triage of operations for thoracic malignancies: A consensus statement from Thoracic Surgery Outcomes Research Network.

Authors:  Mara Antonoff; Leah Backhus; Daniel J Boffa; Stephen R Broderick; Lisa M Brown; Phillip Carrott; James M Clark; David Cooke; Elizabeth David; Matt Facktor; Farhood Farjah; Eric Grogan; James Isbell; David R Jones; Biniam Kidane; Anthony W Kim; Shaf Keshavjee; Seth Krantz; Natalie Lui; Linda Martin; Robert A Meguid; Shari L Meyerson; Tim Mullett; Heidi Nelson; David D Odell; Joseph D Phillips; Varun Puri; Valerie Rusch; Lawrence Shulman; Thomas K Varghese; Elliot Wakeam; Douglas E Wood
Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2020-04-09       Impact factor: 5.209

7.  Esophageal oncologic surgery in SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) emergency.

Authors:  Lavinia Barbieri; Eider Talavera Urquijo; Paolo Parise; Magnus Nilsson; John V Reynolds; Riccardo Rosati
Journal:  Dis Esophagus       Date:  2020-05-15       Impact factor: 3.429

8.  Managing COVID-19 in Surgical Systems.

Authors:  Mary Elizabeth Brindle; Atul Gawande
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2020-07       Impact factor: 12.969

9.  Are We Harming Cancer Patients by Delaying Their Cancer Surgery During the COVID-19 Pandemic?

Authors:  Kiran K Turaga; Saket Girotra
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2020-06-02       Impact factor: 12.969

10.  Cancer patients in SARS-CoV-2 infection: a nationwide analysis in China.

Authors:  Wenhua Liang; Weijie Guan; Ruchong Chen; Wei Wang; Jianfu Li; Ke Xu; Caichen Li; Qing Ai; Weixiang Lu; Hengrui Liang; Shiyue Li; Jianxing He
Journal:  Lancet Oncol       Date:  2020-02-14       Impact factor: 41.316

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  8 in total

Review 1.  Changes in the quality of cancer care as assessed through performance indicators during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: a scoping review.

Authors:  Ana Sofia Carvalho; Óscar Brito Fernandes; Mats de Lange; Hester Lingsma; Niek Klazinga; Dionne Kringos
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 2.908

Review 2.  [Impact of COVID-19 on oncological surgery of the upper gastrointestinal tract].

Authors:  Benjamin Babic; Rabi R Datta; Wolfgang Schröder; Lars M Schiffmann; Thomas Schmidt; Christiane J Bruns; Hans F Fuchs
Journal:  Chirurg       Date:  2021-08-27       Impact factor: 0.955

3.  Non-COVID surgical load of operation theatre during COVID-19 pandemic in Armed Forces tertiary care centres: "Snapshot of two timelines".

Authors:  Shamik Kumar Paul; Arjun Joshi; Akhil Goel; Gunjan Singh; Debashish Paul; Mayank Dhiman; Mithunjeet Singh
Journal:  Med J Armed Forces India       Date:  2022-06-12

4.  Impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on emergency surgery services-a multi-national survey among WSES members.

Authors:  Martin Reichert; Massimo Sartelli; Markus A Weigand; Christoph Doppstadt; Matthias Hecker; Alexander Reinisch-Liese; Fabienne Bender; Ingolf Askevold; Winfried Padberg; Federico Coccolini; Fausto Catena; Andreas Hecker
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2020-12-09       Impact factor: 5.469

5.  Impact of Smoking Status on Perioperative Morbidity, Mortality, and Long-Term Survival Following Transthoracic Esophagectomy for Esophageal Cancer.

Authors:  Sivesh K Kamarajah; Anantha Madhavan; Jakub Chmelo; Maziar Navidi; Shajahan Wahed; Arul Immanuel; Nick Hayes; S Michael Griffin; Alexander W Phillips
Journal:  Ann Surg Oncol       Date:  2021-03-03       Impact factor: 5.344

6.  Two years later: Is the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic still having an impact on emergency surgery? An international cross-sectional survey among WSES members.

Authors:  Martin Reichert; Massimo Sartelli; Markus A Weigand; Matthias Hecker; Philip U Oppelt; Julia Noll; Ingolf H Askevold; Juliane Liese; Winfried Padberg; Federico Coccolini; Fausto Catena; Andreas Hecker
Journal:  World J Emerg Surg       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 8.165

7.  The worldwide impact of COVID-19 on cancer care: A meta-analysis of surveys published after the first wave of the pandemic.

Authors:  Serena Di Cosimo; Nicola Susca; Giovanni Apolone; Nicola Silvestris; Vito Racanelli
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 5.738

8.  Continuity of Cancer Care: The Surgical Experience of Two Large Cancer Hubs in London and Milan.

Authors:  Maria J Monroy-Iglesias; Marta Tagliabue; Harvey Dickinson; Graham Roberts; Rita De Berardinis; Beth Russell; Charlotte Moss; Sophie Irwin; Jonathon Olsburgh; Ivana Maria Francesca Cocco; Alexis Schizas; Sarah McCrindle; Rahul Nath; Aina Brunet; Ricard Simo; Chrysostomos Tornari; Parthi Srinivasan; Andreas Prachalias; Andrew Davies; Jenny Geh; Stephanie Fraser; Tom Routledge; RuJun Ma; Ella Doerge; Ben Challacombe; Raj Nair; Marios Hadjipavlou; Rosaria Scarpinata; Paolo Sorelli; Saoirse Dolly; Francesco Alessandro Mistretta; Gennaro Musi; Monica Casiraghi; Alessia Aloisi; Andrea Dell'Acqua; Donatella Scaglione; Stefania Zanoni; Daniele Rampazio Da Silva; Daniela Brambilla; Raffaella Bertolotti; Giulia Peruzzotti; Angelo Maggioni; Ottavio de Cobelli; Lorenzo Spaggiari; Mohssen Ansarin; Fabrizio Mastrilli; Sara Gandini; Urvashi Jain; Hisham Hamed; Kate Haire; Mieke Van Hemelrijck
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-30       Impact factor: 6.639

  8 in total

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