Literature DB >> 32532703

A Systematic Review on Guidelines and Recommendations for Urology Standard of Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Flavio Lobo Heldwein1, Stacy Loeb2, Marcelo Langer Wroclawski3, Ashwin Narasimha Sridhar4, Arie Carneiro5, Fabio Sepulveda Lima6, Jeremy Yuen-Chun Teoh7.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: The first case of the new coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV2), was identified in Wuhan, China, in late 2019. Since then, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak was reclassified as a pandemic, and health systems around the world have faced an unprecedented challenge.
OBJECTIVE: To summarize guidelines and recommendations on the urology standard of care during the COVID-19 pandemic. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: Guidelines and recommendations published between November 2019 and April 17, 2020 were retrieved using MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL. This was supplemented by searching the web pages of international urology societies. Our inclusion criteria were guidelines, recommendations, or best practice statements by international urology organizations and reference centers about urological care in different phases of the COVID-19 pandemic. Our systematic review was conducted according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) statement. Of 366 titles identified, 15 guidelines met our criteria. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: Of the 15 guidelines, 14 addressed emergency situations and 12 reported on assessment of elective uro-oncology procedures. There was consensus on postponing radical prostatectomy except for high-risk prostate cancer, and delaying treatment for low-grade bladder cancer, small renal masses up to T2, and stage I seminoma. According to nine guidelines that addressed endourology, obstructed or infected kidneys should be decompressed, whereas nonobstructing stones and stent removal should be rescheduled. Five guidelines/recommendations discussed laparoscopic and robotic surgery, while the remaining recommendations focused on outpatient procedures and consultations. All recommendations represented expert opinions, with three specifically endorsed by professional societies. Only the European Association of Urology guidelines provided evidence-based levels of evidence (mostly level 3 evidence).
CONCLUSIONS: To make informed decisions during the COVID-19 pandemic, there are multiple national and international guidelines and recommendations for urologists to prioritize the provision of care. Differences among the guidelines were minimal. PATIENT
SUMMARY: We performed a systematic review of published recommendations on urological practice during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, which provide guidance on prioritizing the timing for different types of urological care.
Copyright © 2020 European Association of Urology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; Clinical decision making; Coronavirus; Guidelines; Urogenital system; Urological surgical procedures; Urology

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32532703      PMCID: PMC7274599          DOI: 10.1016/j.euf.2020.05.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Urol Focus        ISSN: 2405-4569


Introduction

During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, international efforts have been made to inform and prepare health care workers in order to optimize and redirect resources and personnel to manage this crisis. As of May 4, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 239 604 deaths [1]. To date, there is no approved vaccine for COVID-19, and the number of cases has continued to rise as of the date of submission. Several urology societies and reference centers have published recommendations to inform urology care during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is essential for urologists to prioritize patient safety, and to balance potential delays in diagnosis and treatment of urological conditions against risks of COVID-19 exposure and additional stress on health care resources. These issues are of particular concern in epicenters or areas with the greatest number of cases. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize published guidelines and recommendations on urological care during the COVID-19 pandemic from major professional urology societies and reference centers.

Evidence acquisition

Search strategy

A comprehensive literature search was performed using a combination of keywords (MeSH terms and free text words) including (“COVID-19” OR “SARS-CoV-2” OR “Coronavirus” OR “coronavirus infections”) AND (“Urology” OR “Urogenital system”). MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL were searched (Supplementary material). The search was supplemented to include references from the pertinent articles as well as hand searches of additional relevant records on COVID-19 resource websites from the European Association of Urology (EAU), American Urological Association (AUA), and British Journal of Urology International. Our search was up-to-dated to include publications through April 17, 2020.

Eligibility criteria

Articles were eligible for inclusion if they contained original guidelines or recommendations on urology standards of care during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Information sources

Our search strategy yielded 366 articles. All the articles were combined into EndNote reference management software, and 127 duplicates were removed. Two authors (M.L.W. and F.L.H.) independently identified and reviewed the titles and abstracts. For an article to be excluded, both reviewers had to agree that the study was not relevant. The exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) not focused on urology, (2) not containing recommendations involving urology practice during COVID-19, and (3) not written in English. After reviewing the titles and abstracts, 72 papers were identified as potentially eligible for inclusion. After a full-text review, 15 were deemed eligible and were included. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram is shown in Fig. 1 .
Fig. 1

PRISMA flowchart summarizing the results of the literature search. PRISMA = Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses.

PRISMA flowchart summarizing the results of the literature search. PRISMA = Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses.

Data extraction

Two independent reviewers (F.S.L. and F.L.H.) extracted all relevant recommendations from each guideline. Disagreements concerning data extraction were resolved by discussion and consensus. Thereafter, a recommendation matrix was constructed considering distinct conditions, such as urological oncology, endourology, outpatient procedures, other benign procedures, emergencies, and transplantation. The following variables were extracted from the articles: list of authors, title of the article, publication date, country, search strategy, purpose of the guideline, guideline type, subareas covered, and conclusions.

Evidence synthesis

For quality assessment, the team checked for the level of evidence and grade of recommendations. The authors summarized the recommendations using a triage grading system based on two factors: (1) possible impairment in patient condition or survivorship if surgery is not performed and (2) different regional health care resource settings (Fig. 2 ).
Fig. 2

Proposed emergency and elective procedures triage color codes to summarize collated evidence, integrating survival and healthcare resources.

Proposed emergency and elective procedures triage color codes to summarize collated evidence, integrating survival and healthcare resources. Published data were used for this systematic review; hence, no ethical approval was sought.

Results

Study selection and characteristics of the included guidelines

All 15 included articles were accepted for publication between March 15 and April 17, 2020. The articles came from various institutions in Europe (Italy, UK, Belgium, and Switzerland), the Americas (USA, Canada, and Brazil), and Australia/New Zealand. All the 15 guidelines were based on expert opinion (Table 1 ).
Table 1

List of included articles.

Author(s)/title/journalDateMonth, day (2020)Situation reported
ObjectiveSubareasMethodsTopics
GlobalTotal confirmed cases/total deathsCountryTotal confirmed casesTotal deaths (new deaths in 24 h)
Ficarra et al [2]/Urology practice during COVID-19 pandemic/Minerva Urol NefrolMarch 23332 930/14 50959 138 cases5476 (649) deathsItalyTo summarize the procedures that should be performed in urgent, nonurgent, postponed conditions for the corresponding urological disorderUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionUrgencies, bladder, prostate, testicular, penile, cystoscopy
Stensland et al [13]/Considerations in the triage of urologic surgeries during the COVID-19 pandemic/Eur UrolMarch 25413 467/18 43369 176 cases6820 (743) deathsItaly8081 cases422 (87) deathsUKTo recommend surgeries and rationality to delay or treatUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionGeneral
Mottrie et al [10]/ERUS (EAU Robotic Urology Section) guidelines during COVID-19 emergency/Eur UrolMarch 25413 467/18 433220 516 cases11 986 (1797) deathsEuropeRecommendations, based on the most recent scientific pieces of evidence, to safeguard the health of health care workers and their patients, in the context of robotic surgeryUro-oncology (robotics)GuidelinesUrothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular, functional, reconstructive
USANZ [3]/Guidelines for urological prioritisation during COVID-19March 25413 467/18 4332252 Cases8 (1) deathsAustralia189 cases0 (0) deathNew ZealandGuidelines for surgical prioritizationUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesSociety guidelinesUro-oncology, urgencies, endourology, outpatients
Katz et al [8]/Triaging office-based urology procedures during the COVID-19 pandemic/J UrolMarch 25413 467/18 43351 914 cases673 (202) deathsUSARepresenting a collection of urologists from several institutions across 45 countries, with expertise in different subspecialty fields of urology—seek to provide 46 frameworks to help triage office-based proceduresUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionCystoscopy, prostate biopsies, ureteral stent removal, urodynamics, female urology
Kutikov et al [6]/A war on two fronts: cancer care in the time of COVID-19/Ann Intern MedMarch 27509 164/23 33568 334 cases991 (107) deathsUSAGuidance on decisions about immediate cancer treatmentUro-oncologyExpert opinionUrothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular
Goldman and Haber [4]/Recommendations for tiered stratification of urologic surgery urgency in the COVID-19 era/J UrolMarch 30693 282/33 106122 653 cases2112 (444) deathsUSARecommended surgical priority tiersUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionDiagnostic cystoscopy, surveillance cystoscopy, intravesical instillations for bladder cancer, prostate biopsies and administration of androgen deprivation, cystoscopy with ureteral stent removal, Foley and suprapubic catheter exchanges, urodynamics
Ahmed et al [14]/Global challenges to urology practice during COVID-19 pandemic/BJU IntApril 3972 303/50 32138 700 cases2910 (389) deathsUKPutting together a collection of the latest BJUI-published articles on the topic.Adapted from RCS Intercollegiate General Surgery GuidanceUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionOutpatients, general safety
Lalani et al [15]/Prioritizing systemic therapies for genitourinary malignancies: Canadian recommendations during the COVID-19 pandemic/Can Urol Assoc JApril 51 133 758/62 78412 938 Cases214 (62) deathsCanada18 academic genitourinary medical oncologists from 11 cancer centers across Canada participated in preparing this guidance document for managing patients during the current pandemicUro-oncologyExpert opinionUrothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular
Carneiro et al [7]/Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the urologist’s clinical practice in Brazil: a management guideline proposal for low- and middle-income countries during the crisis period/Int Braz J UrolApril 91 436 198/85 52113 717 cases667 (114) deathsBrazilProviding suggestions and recommendations for the management of urological conditions in times of COVID-19 crisis in Brazil and other low- and middle-income countriesUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesExpert opinionUrolithiasis, BPH, hematuria, urgencies, urodynamic, prostate biopsy, intravesical instillations, urothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular
Quaedackers et al [16]/Clinical and surgical consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic for patients with pediatric urological problems: statement of the EAU Guidelines Panel for Paediatric Urology/J Pediatr UrolApril 91 436 198/85 521759 661 cases61 516 (3877) deathsEuropeStatement with recommendations for pediatric urological cases based on published studies as well as expert opinion of the pediatric urology guidelines panel of the EAUPediatric urologySociety guidelinesPediatric urology
Proietti et al [17]/Endourological stone management in the era of the COVID-19/Eur UrolApril 141 844 863/117 021159 516 Cases20 465 (564) deathsItalyPrioritization scheme for stone patients scheduled for surgery during the COVID-19 pandemicEndourologyExpert opinionUrolithiasis
Gillessen et al [18]/Advice regarding systemic therapy in patients with urological cancers during the COVID-19 pandemic/Eur UrolApril 172 074 529/139 37826 651 cases1016 (43) deathsSwitzerland103 097 cases13 729 (861)UKProviding treatment guidelines as a pragmatic perspective on the risk/benefit ratioUro-oncologyExpert opinionUrothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular
Ribal et al [5]/EAU Guidelines Office-Rapid-Reaction-Group. An organization wide collaborative effort to adapt the EAU guidelines recommendations to the COVID-19 eraApril 172 074 529/139 3781 050 871 cases93 480 (4163) deathsEuropeTreatment guidelines with most levels of evidence using a 4-level priorityUro-oncology, endourology, outpatients, benign conditions, emergenciesSociety guidelinesUrothelial cancer, prostate, renal mass, testicular
Metzler et al [9]/Stone care triage during COVID-19 at the University of Washington/J EndourolApril 172 074 529/139 378632 781 Cases28 221 (2350) deathsUSACategorizing patients into five groups of priorityEndourologyExpert opinionUrolithiasis

BPH = benign prostatic hyperplasia; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; EAU = European Association of Urology; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand.

List of included articles. BPH = benign prostatic hyperplasia; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; EAU = European Association of Urology; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Uro-oncology

Postponing treatments for low- and intermediary-risk prostate cancer (PCa) was widely proposed as it is unlikely to result in clinical harm. Concerning high-risk PCa, some authors disagree upon postponement of surgery, while the others recommended proceeding with radical prostatectomy [2], [3]. Goldman and Haber [4] stated that surgery can be delayed beyond 3 mo, and Ribal et al [5] and Kutikov et al [6] recommended treatment before the end of 3 mo. Indeed, considering the EAU guideline, depending on the local situation of the pandemic, surgery for high-risk PCa can be postponed until after the pandemic [5]. Prescribing neoadjuvant androgen deprivation therapy in this situation is an option [5], [6], [7]. In the case of muscle-invasive bladder cancer, several authors stated that radical cystectomy is nondeferrable and neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be omitted [5,6,8,]. Carneiro et al [7] suggested that neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be delayed for up to 6–8 wk and cystectomy can be delayed for up to 10 wk. The authors agreed that a delay of <3 mo is acceptable for T1b-T2 renal tumors. Another concern is metastatic renal cell carcinoma. The EAU panel discussed that cytoreductive surgery is controversial irrespective of the pandemic [5]. Only two articles covered recommendations regarding adrenal masses, and both agreed that adrenal masses >4 cm or functional should be treated in <1 mo [4,8]. Orchiectomy for suspected testicular tumors is nondeferrable. While several authors suggested starting adjuvant radiotherapy or chemotherapy for stage I seminomas, the EAU guidelines recommended active surveillance as the first choice of management for stage I seminoma [5]. Finally, concerning penile cancer, due to the lack of objective response and immunodeficiency from chemotherapy, palliative treatments and supportive care are recommended for metastatic penile cancer during the pandemic [5]. The synthesis of recommendations for uro-oncology is provided in Table 2 .
Table 2

Summary of guidelines: urologic oncology during COVID-19 pandemic.

Prostate cancer

Age/recommendation
Surgery
Radiation


Cancer risk


LowIntermediateHighHigh riskMetastatic hormone sensitive
Ficarra et al [2]Nondeferrable
Stensland et al [13]Safe delay 12 moSafe delay 12 moIf patient is ineligible for radiationConsider radiation (for intermediary risk = safe delay 12 mo)
Mottrie [10]To postponeHighMediumWeak
USANZ [3]Active surveillanceInitial ADT + deferred definitive treatmentAs planned
Katz et al [8]Delay 6-8 weeks
Kutikov et al [6]<50 yrSafe delay >3 moSafe delay >3 moProceed w/ immediate treatment. Delay <3 mo acceptableConsider starting androgen deprivation if significant delay
50–70 yrBalance risk and benefits of immediate treatment
>70 yrConsider starting androgen deprivation if significant delay
Goldman and Haber [4]Can be delayed beyond 12 wk
Ahmed et al [14]As planned
Lalani et al [15]Can be delayed up to 6 mo
Carneiro et al [7]PostponeConsider starting androgen deprivationConsider starting androgen deprivation
Gillessen et al [18]Commence where possible
Ribal et al [5]Postpone treatment for 6-12 moActive surveillance defer by 6 moSurgery can be postponed until after pandemicTreat before end of 3 mo or can be postponed until after pandemicIf patient anxious or N1, consider ADT + EBRT as alternativeTreat before end of 3 mo (use immediate neoadjuvant ADT up to 6 mo followed by EBRT)Offer immediate systemic treatment to M1If low volume and planned ADT + EBRT, postpone EBRT until pandemic is no longer a major threat
Summary44321
Age/recommendationBladder cancerUpper tract U cancer
Low gradeRefractory CISSuspected > cT1High-grade non–muscle invasiveMuscle invasiveMultimodality bladder sparingMetastatic first-line treatmentPresume low-risk (ureteroscopy or surgery)High-grade nephroureterectomyMetastatic first-line treatment
Ficarra et al [2]NondeferrableNondeferrableNondeferrableNondeferrable
Stensland et al [13]Proceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatment regardless of the receipt of neoadjuvant chemoProceed w/ immediate treatment
Mottrie [10]To postponeMediumWeakWeakWeakMediumWeak
USANZ [3]As plannedAs plannedAs plannedAs plannedConsider neoadjuvant chemo
Kutikov et al [6]<70 yrSafe delay >3 moProceed w/ treatment. Delay <3 mo acceptableProceed w/ treatment. Delay <3 mo acceptable
>70 yrSafe delay >3 moBalance risk and benefits of immediate treatmentBalance risk and benefits of immediate treatment
Goldman and Haber [4]Delayed 4–12 wkScheduleScheduleDelayed beyond 4-12 wkSchedule
Ahmed et al [14]PriorityPriority
Lalani et al [15]As plannedAdjuvant delayAdjuvant delay whenever possible
Carneiro et al [7]DelayProceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatmentNeoadjuvant chemo can be delayed for up to 6–8 wk, cystectomy delay for up 10 wkProceed w/ immediate treatment
Gillessen et al [18]Commenced where possibleCommenced where possible
Ribal et al [5]Defer by 6 moTreat before end of 3 moTreat within <6 wkTreat within <6 wkTreat before end of 3 mo (consider omitting neoadjuvant chemo in T2/T3)Treat before end of 3 moIf palliative (consider only radio + chemo)Treat within <6 wkChemo adjuvant for N+Not recommended to postpone >3 moTreat within <6 wkTreat before end of 3 mo
Summary4222222311
Age/recommendationKidney cancerAdrenal
SRM <4 cmT1b-T2T3Metastatic intermediate and poor riskCA suspected/symptomaticCA not suspected
Ficarra et al [2]Nondeferrable in selective casesNondeferrable
Stensland et al [13]Delay <3 mo acceptable or other forms of ablative approachesDelay <3 mo acceptableProceed w/ treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatment
Gillessen et al [18]Commenced where possible
Mottrie [10]To postponeMediumMediumWeak
USANZ [3]>7 cm = as plannedAs planned
Kutikov et al [6]<50 yrSafe delay >3 moProceed w/ immediate treatment. Delay <3 mo acceptable
50–70 yrSafe delay >3 moproceed w/ immediate treatment. Delay <3 mo acceptable
>70 yrSafe delay >3 moBalance risk and benefits of immediate treatment
Goldman and Haber [4]Can be delayed beyond 12 wkCan be delayed 4–12 wkScheduledCan be delayed up to 4 wkCan be delayed beyond 12 wk
Ahmed et al [14]PriorityPriority
Lalani et al [15]Recommended
Carneiro et al [7]DelayAvoid delayProceed w/ treatmentProceed w/ treatment
Ribal et al [5]Defer by 6 moTreat before end of 3 moTreat within <6 wkTreat within <6 wkConsider starting on VEGFR TKI rather than immune checkpoint inhibitor therapyCytoreductive for asymptomatic is controversial irrespective of the pandemic
Summary432124
Testicular cancerPenile cancer
OrchiectomyPostchemo RPLNDMetastaticLocalMetastatic
Stage 1 seminomaStage ≥ IIB seminoma or NSGCT
Ficarra et al [2]NondeferrableNondeferrableNondeferrable
Stensland et al [13]Proceed w/ immediate treatmentFavor chemotherapy or radiationChemotherapy use should be balanced by concern for immunosuppressionProceed w/ immediate treatment
USANZ [3]As plannedConsider deferral if suggestive of slowly growing mature teratoma
Kutikov et al [6]Proceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatment
Goldman and Haber [4]ScheduleCan be delayed up to 4 wkSchedule
Lalani et al [15]Minimum delay if possibleNot to initiate adjuvant chemotherapy(Stage II seminoma or good-risk GCT with COVID-19 diagnosis) discuss chemotherapy delay whenever possible
Carneiro et al [7]As soon as possibleRadiotherapy whenever possible (stage 2 low-volume seminoma)
Gillessen et al [18]Curative intent commenced where possible
Ribal et al [5]May be postponed 2–3 dTreat within <6 wkActive surveillance is the first choice of managementTreat within <24 hTreat within <6 wkConsider palliation instead
Summary122024

ADT = androgen deprivation therapy; CA = cancer; chemo = chemotherapy; CIS = carcinoma in situ; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; EBRT = external beam radiation therapy; GCT = germ cell tumor; NSGCT = nonseminomatous GCT; RPLND = retroperitoneal lymph node dissection; SRM = small renal mass; TKI = tyrosine kinase inhibitor; U = urothelial, USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; VEGFR = vascular endothelial growth factor receptor; w/ = with.

Summary of guidelines: urologic oncology during COVID-19 pandemic. ADT = androgen deprivation therapy; CA = cancer; chemo = chemotherapy; CIS = carcinoma in situ; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; EBRT = external beam radiation therapy; GCT = germ cell tumor; NSGCT = nonseminomatous GCT; RPLND = retroperitoneal lymph node dissection; SRM = small renal mass; TKI = tyrosine kinase inhibitor; U = urothelial, USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; VEGFR = vascular endothelial growth factor receptor; w/ = with.

Endourology

Nine of the included guidelines (60%) contained recommendations related to endourology procedures. Obstructed or infected renal and ureteral stones should be considered emergencies, and decompression should be performed. However, there is a consensus that treatment of nonobstructed renal stones can be delayed for months. Nevertheless, it is important to note that patients with symptomatic ureteral/renal stone and those with pre-existing stent should be considered priorities. However, authors disagreed on the maximum waiting time ranging from 6–8 to 12 wk [4], [5], [9]. A comparison of endourology recommendations between guidelines is displayed in Table 3 .
Table 3

Summary of guidelines: endourology (urolithiasis) procedures during COVID-19 pandemic.

Nonobstructing renal stoneNonobstructing ureteral stoneRenal colicStent removalStone with stent/nephrostomy tube or symptomaticObstructed kidney/infection
Ficarra et al [2]Postpone up to 6 moEmergency
Stensland et al [13]up to 6–12 moEmergencyEmergency
USANZ [3]DelayDelayAs plannedAs plannedAs planned
Katz et al [8]Without delayConsider no delay
Goldman and Haber [4]Can be delayed beyond 12 wkScheduleCan be delayed up to 4 wkCan be delayed 4–12 wkEmergency
Ahmed et al [14]Urgent
Carneiro et al [7]Managed clinicallyDelayNot to delayEmergency
Proietti et al [17]DelayDelayManaged conservativelyDelayDelay but consider prioritiesNot to delay = only decompression
Metzler et al [9]Postpone<2–4 wk<2–4 w (if recurrent ED visits)<4–8 wkEmergency
Ribal et al [5]Clinical harm very unlikely if postponed >6 moClinical harm possible if postponed 3–4 mo, but unlikelyPain reliefAvoid NSAIDs (ibuprofen) when possibleClinical harm very unlikely if postponed >6 mo (as soon situation allows)Clinical harm very likely if postponed >6 wkUrgent decompression of the collecting system (PCN or stent)
Summary444320

ED = emergency department; NSAID = nonsteriodal anti-inflammatory drug; PCN = percutaneous nephrostomy; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Summary of guidelines: endourology (urolithiasis) procedures during COVID-19 pandemic. ED = emergency department; NSAID = nonsteriodal anti-inflammatory drug; PCN = percutaneous nephrostomy; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Laparoscopy and robotics

Five of the 15 guidelines (30%) included recommendations for laparoscopic/robotic surgeries (Table 4 ). Some recommendations were made about the surgical technique and surgical team, such as lower electrocautery power settings to generate less smoke that could potentially transport the virus. Moreover, urologists can consider using lower pressure on insufflation system with integrated active smoke evacuation mode. In addition, presence in the operating room should be restricted to essential staff and the operating room team must wear full personal protective equipment.
Table 4

Summary of guidelines: robotic procedures during COVID-19 pandemic.

Operation techniquePneumoperitoneum disinflationSurgical technique
Mottrie [10]Lower electrocautery power settingUse of system with integrated active smoke evacuation modeMinimum number of OR staff membersFellows temporarily suspendedAdopt adequate PPE
Ahmed et al [14]Safety undeterminedPositive pressurization off
Quaedackers et al [16]Use suction devices as much as possibleKeep intraperitoneal pressure as low as possible and aspirate the inflated CO2
Carneiro et al [7]Pressure as low as possible + use filterPositive pressurization offAdopt adequate PPE
Ribal et al [5]Electrosurgery units to the lowest settingsAvoid or reduce use of monopolar electrosurgery, ultrasonic dissectors, and advanced bipolarKeep intraperitoneal pressure as low as possible and aspirate the inflated CO2 as much as possible before removing the trocarsAll nonessential staff should stay outsideSurfaces should be decontamination with chlorine (5000–10 000 mg/l; note that chlorhexidine is ineffective against COVID-19 and is not appropriate)

COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; OR = operating room; PPE = personal protective equipment.

Summary of guidelines: robotic procedures during COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; OR = operating room; PPE = personal protective equipment.

Outpatient procedures (urological oncology, neurourology, female urology, and pediatric urology)

Recommendations for ambulatory procedures are presented in Table 5 . Not all experts recommended cystoscopy for immediate investigation of macroscopic hematuria, and a delay of 1–2 mo was recommended [5]. Postponing prostate biopsy was not a consensus, and a case-by-case consideration should guide these decisions. Indeed, the Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand (USANZ) stated that Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PIRADS) 4/5 should be managed as planned; EAU suggested that there should not be a delay of >6 wk for symptomatic patients [3], [5]. Stage 2 neuromodulation should be carried on due to the possibility of infection. Authors disagreed on the timing of treating mesh complications and fistula repair. Most pediatric urology surgeries can be postponed, except for some oncological conditions or those that may lead to loss of renal function.
Table 5

Summary of guidelines: outpatient procedures during COVID-19 pandemic (urologic oncology, neurourology, female urology, and pediatric urology).

Uro-oncology
Neurourology
Female urology
Pediatric urology
Bladder CA
Prostate biopsyNeurogenic cysto/BotoxUrodynamicsStage 2 sacral neuromodulationUrethral diverticula/mesh removal/sling incision/fistulaSlings, pelvic organ prolapse, sacral, pessary cleaning/exchange neuromodulation stage 1, artificial urethral sphincterPediatric: pyeloplasty with severe symptoms, posterior urethral valves. obstructed megaureter with loss of function, urolithiasis with recurring febrile infectionsReimplant, penile and benign testicular cases and buried penis, living donor renal tx
Surveillance cystoscopy
Intravesical BCG/chemotherapy induction or postoperative
Intravesical BCG/chemotherapy maintenance
Low or intermediate riskHigh riskLow or intermediate riskHigh riskLow or intermediate riskHigh risk
Ficarra et al [2]PostponeDo not postponePostpone
Stensland et al [13]Proceed w/ immediate treatmentDelayDelay
Mottrie [10]
USANZ [3]PIRADS 4/5 = as planned
Katz et al [8]Safe delay 3–6 moProceed w/ immediate investigationPatients should be prioritized for treatmentDelay indefinitelyStop and re-evaluate in 3 moSafe delay 3 mo, suggest transperinealSafe delay 3–6 mo (if low or intermediate PCa suspected)Delay for 3–6 mo GU tract dysfunctionWithout delayDelay 3–6 mo
Goldman and Haber [4]PSA >15 = can be delayed 4–12 wkNeurogenic = can be delayed up to 4 wkCan be delayed 4–12 wkScheduleCan be delayed 4–12 wkCan be delayed beyond 12 wkCan be delayed beyond 12 wk
Carneiro et al [7]PostponeTreat as plannedTreat as plannedPostpone, suggestion under localDelay
Quaedackers et al [16]As plannedPostpone
Ribal et al [5]Defer by 6 moFollow-up before end of 3 moMay be abandonedTreat within <6 wkMay be abandonedTreat within <6 wkPostponed until the end of the pandemic (at least as long as the confinement is ongoing)Diagnose within <6 wk (biopsy without MRI if locally advanced or highly symptomatic)DeferredClinical harm very likely if postponed >6 wkClinical harm very unlikely if postponed 6 moClinical harm very likely if postponed >6 wkDefer by 6 moReimplant (<3 mo)
Summary44424342423414

BCG = bacillus Calmette-Guerin; CA = cancer; cysto = cystoscopy; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; PCa = prostate cancer; PIRADS = Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System; PSA = prostate-specific antigen; tx = transplant, USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; w/ = with.

Summary of guidelines: outpatient procedures during COVID-19 pandemic (urologic oncology, neurourology, female urology, and pediatric urology). BCG = bacillus Calmette-Guerin; CA = cancer; cysto = cystoscopy; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; PCa = prostate cancer; PIRADS = Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System; PSA = prostate-specific antigen; tx = transplant, USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; w/ = with.

Kidney transplantation, infections, trauma, low urinary tract obstruction, and andrology

All but one guideline provided recommendations for managing emergencies, which were grouped into infections, trauma/hemorrhage, benign prostatic hyperplasia and urethral stricture, transplantation, and andrology (Table 6 ). With respect to renal transplantation the EAU proposed that this be postponed for >3 mo [5].
Table 6

Summary of guidelines: procedures of other subdisciplines during COVID-19 pandemic (transplantation, infections, trauma, low urinary tract obstruction, and andrology).

Transplantation
InfectionTraumaHemorrhage
BPH
UrethraAndrology
Cadaveric renal txLiving donor renal txUrological abscess/wound washoutsurgical bleeding/traumaHematuria—macro (cystoscopy for)Clot retentionUrinary retention unable to place catheterBPH on self-catheterization or safe voidingUrethral stricture with imminent obstructionPenile fracturePriapismInfected prosthesis/devices (include artificial sphincter and penile implants)Acute torsionPenile prosthesis, infertility/non--CA scrotal surgery, vasectomy/circumcision, buried penis, Peyronies
Ficarra et al [2]EmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergency
Stensland et al [13]Proceed w/ immediate treatmentDelayProceed w/ immediate treatmentEmergencyEmergencyProceed w/ immediate treatmentDelayProceed w/ suprapubic tubeEmergencyProceed w/ immediate treatmentProceed w/ immediate treatmentDelay
Mottrie [10]UrgencyUrgency
USANZ [3]As plannedDelay of 1–2 moTURP only if not suitable for self-catheterization or indwelling catheterAs planned
Katz et al [8]Without delay
Goldman and Haber [4]EmergencyCan be delayed beyond 12 wkEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyCan be delayed beyond 12 wkScheduleEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyCan be delayed beyond 12 wk
Ahmed et al [14]UrgentAs plannedUrgent
Carneiro et al [7]EmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyEmergencyPostponePostponeEmergency
Ribal et al [5]Clinical harm possible if postponed 3–4 mo but unlikely (case-by-case discussion)Clinical harm very unlikely if postponed 6 moLife-threatening situationLife-threatening situationDiagnose within <6 wkDiagnose within <24 hClinical harm very unlikely if postponed 6 moClinical harm very likely if postponed >6 wkTreat within <24 hClinical harm possible if postponed 3–4 mo but unlikely
Summary24001004100004

BPH = benign prostatic hyperplasia; CA = cancer; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; TURP = transurethral resection of the prostate; tx = transplant; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; w/ = with.

Summary of guidelines: procedures of other subdisciplines during COVID-19 pandemic (transplantation, infections, trauma, low urinary tract obstruction, and andrology). BPH = benign prostatic hyperplasia; CA = cancer; COVID-19 = coronavirus disease 2019; TURP = transurethral resection of the prostate; tx = transplant; USANZ = Urological Society of Australia and New Zealand; w/ = with.

Discussion

This systematic review aimed to synthesize available recommendations on risk/benefit ratio of delaying versus proceeding with the most commonly performed diagnostics and surgeries in urology during the COVID-19 crisis. Redirection of resources and the prioritization of medical care aims to allow continuity of appropriate and timely assessment and management for patients with high-risk conditions, while minimizing undue risk and strain from conditions for which care can be delayed safely. In this regard, feasibility of the health care infrastructure should be determined according to the availability of health system resources, such as intensive care unit (ICU) beds, ventilators, personal protective equipment, COVID-19 tests, and health care professionals. The use of good surgical judgment can reduce the burden on health care systems across the globe. Nonoperative management should be considered whenever it is clinically appropriate for the patient. These decisions can also help limit team staffing and optimize local health care capacity to respond to the crisis. Our systematic review of 15 clinical practice guidelines and recommendations across major urology subareas, and most routine conditions identified 761 separate recommendations for best urological practice during the COVID-19 crisis. The lack of standardization and differences among guidelines may result in skepticism about how to match resources with patient need. Some of this variation may be due to the date of publication amid the rapidly evolving case numbers and different available resources across different geographic areas. Three of 15 (20%) guidelines have been endorsed by a specific panel or society: EAU, EAU Robotic Urology Section (ERUS), and USANZ [3], [5], [10]. In this review, we noted a paucity of recommendations on management of urological conditions with a more prolonged crisis. Only one guideline stated that recommendations should be revised if the crisis had a duration of ≥3 mo [7]. The American College of Surgeons (ACS) was referenced by the AUA web page. The ACS organized decision making into three different scenarios [11]. Phase 1 is the preparation phase for institutions and localities where COVID-19 cases are not in the rapid escalation phase, in which only a few patients are hospitalized, and beds and ICU ventilators not exhausted. In this setting, the regional leadership and surgical teams must plan to treat diseases as indicated, given that a delay in treatment could reduce the chance of being cured. Phase 2 and phase 3 are urgent settings where hospital resources are all routed to COVID-19. Pragmatically, four of the 15 papers provided the possibility of individualization of their recommendations according to different communities and hospital resources realities, using a tier system [2], [4], [5], [7]. A number of variables should be considered, such as availability of resources, whether a particular local institution is assessed as a COVID-free hospital, capacity of ICU beds and ventilators, and whether the curve has flattened. Most of the articles reviewed are recommendations and not guidelines, primarily based on expert opinion. An exception is the EAU guidelines, which were a monumental effort proposed by a task force of 250 experts and provide evidence correlating the delay of treatment and clinical harm to survival or progression. In addition, the EAU clarifies that its guidelines are endorsed by national societies in 72 countries, providing a supporting document that urologists can use in teamwork and collaboration in their hospitals. According to Lei et al [12], seven of 34 (20.5%) patients died after elective surgeries in Wuhan. At presentation, these patients were asymptomatic carriers and probably were in incubation phase or were infected at the hospital. In many parts of the world, people have been asked to stay at home, and public health authorities made it mandatory to postpone elective surgery. Public health orders such as social distancing and lockdown appear to be effective at reducing the local spread of COVID-19. As the situation continues to evolve, including attempts at returning to the new normal and the threat of additional waves of infection being presented, these recommendations will require updating. Considering uro-oncology, the pandemic has reinforced the concept of active surveillance for low-risk genitourinary tumors. Conversely, there is evidence that a delay of >3 mo has a negative impact on the survival of patients with urothelial tumors, particularly those at high risk, and such tumors should be managed with priority. While the majority of the articles included recommendations to postpone treatment for low- and intermediary-risk PCa, the scope of recommendations regarding high-risk PCa varied. For example, Kutikov et al [6] recommended that high-risk PCa should be treated immediately, Stensland et al [13] recommended that these patients should not be operated and they should be referred to radiotherapy, and Ribal et al [5] recommended that surgery can be postponed up to 3 mo or even after the COVID-19 situation has settled. It is important to note that patients with obstructing and infected stones should be managed, preferably by immediate decompression. In patients who have risk factors, such as pre-existing indwelling ureteral stent, symptomatic, recurrent emergency visits, solitary kidney, and bilateral ureteral calculi, close monitoring for clinical progression is warranted by telehealth, with a low threshold for additional evaluation. Most articles point toward taking precautions to avoid contamination in the operating room. The safety of the resterilization process of endourological materials is a concern. It is highly recommended to clean surfaces with appropriate disinfectants with proven activity against enveloped viruses (hypochlorite), as 0.02% chlorhexidine digluconate can be less effective [5]. Numerous uncertainties remain in laparoscopic/robotic surgeries. It is a general recommendation to avoid generating aerosols through manipulation of the trocars and pneumoperitoneum. Concerns have also been raised about the use of electrocautery and positive pressurization rooms. In normal times, to proceed as planned to perform a cadaveric kidney transplantation is the rule. However, special attention is needed in emergency situations such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Proponents of postponement argue that renal transplantation is highly complex and may require intensive support from a multidisciplinary team, and resources directed to combat COVID-19 might be compromised. The timing of ambulatory cystoscopy for the diagnosis of macroscopic hematuria was an area of disagreement. Although most authors recommend proceeding with investigation of macrohematuria, two guidelines (USANZ and EAU) suggest a delay between 1 and 2 mo. Management of emergencies (eg, ischemic testicular torsion, low-flow priapism, clot retention, and trauma) should not be delayed. There are several limitations in our systematic review. Although these guidelines reflect an impressive effort to quickly provide guidance to urologists during a rapidly evolving emergency, the methodological quality of most guidelines was considered to be low to moderate. The level of evidence did not differ much between guidelines, and all of them were based on expert opinions. No grading of recommendations was reported. Indeed, this review highlights the need for high-quality guidelines that could be referenced in the case of future pandemics or other major emergencies. In this review, we attempted to classify recommendations in a similar fashion to Goldman and Haber’s [4] priority tiers.

Conclusions

Multiple published recommendations exist to guide urology teams during the COVID-19 crisis. Recommendations support the use of active surveillance in lower-risk tumors (low-risk PCa, low-grade bladder cancer, and small renal masses), as well as considering omission of systemic therapies (neoadjuvant or adjuvant treatments) or cytoreductive nephrectomy in some advanced cases. Moreover, there was consensus to propose medical expulsive therapy for uncomplicated ureteral stones, but that infection and/or obstruction of the kidneys with a real risk of urosepsis or functional sequelae must be treated accordingly. Intravesical clots in active hematuria, infected implants, or postoperative hemorrhagic and ischemic complications are considered urological emergencies and must be treated immediately even at a time of pressure to the local health system. Flavio Lobo Heldwein had full access to all the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Study concept and design: Heldwein, Lima, Carneiro, Wroclawski. Acquisition of data: Heldwein, Wroclawski. Analysis and interpretation of data: Heldwein, Loeb. Drafting of the manuscript: Heldwein, Loeb. Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Sridhar, Loeb, Teoh. Statistical analysis: Heldwein. Obtaining funding: None. Administrative, technical, or material support: None. Supervision: Wroclawski, Heldwein. Other: None. Flavio Lobo Heldwein certifies that all conflicts of interest, including specific financial interests and relationships and affiliations relevant to the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript (eg, employment/affiliation, grants or funding, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, royalties, or patents filed, received, or pending), are the following: Flavio Lobo Heldwein received honorarium from Janssen. Stacy Loeb reports reimbursed travel from Sanofi and equity in Gilead. Fabio Sepulveda Lima reports reimbursed travel from Boston Scientific. Jeremy Yuen-Chun Teoh received honorarium from Olympus and Boston Scientific, travel grants from Olympus and Boston Scientific, and research grants from Olympus and Storz. Stacy Loeb is supported by the Edward Blank and Sharon Cosloy-Blank Family Foundation.
  11 in total

1.  Prioritizing systemic therapies for genitourinary malignancies: Canadian recommendations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Aly-Khan A Lalani; Kim N Chi; Daniel Y C Heng; Christian K Kollmannsberger; Srikala S Sridhar; Normand Blais; Christina Canil; Piotr Czaykowski; Sebastien J Hotte; Nayyer Iqbal; Denis Soulières; Dominick Bossé; Nimira S Alimohamed; Naveen S Basappa; Som D Mukherjee; Eric Winquist; Lori A Wood; Scott A North
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2020-04-05       Impact factor: 1.862

2.  Stone Care Triage During COVID-19 at the University of Washington.

Authors:  Ian S Metzler; Mathew D Sorensen; Robert M Sweet; Jonathan D Harper
Journal:  J Endourol       Date:  2020-04-17       Impact factor: 2.942

3.  Considerations in the Triage of Urologic Surgeries During the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Kristian D Stensland; Todd M Morgan; Alireza Moinzadeh; Cheryl T Lee; Alberto Briganti; James W F Catto; David Canes
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2020-04-09       Impact factor: 20.096

4.  Global challenges to urology practice during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Kamran Ahmed; Sulaiman Hayat; Prokar Dasgupta
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2020-05-15       Impact factor: 5.588

5.  Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Urologist's clinical practice in Brazil: a management guideline proposal for low- and middle-income countries during the crisis period.

Authors:  Arie Carneiro; Marcelo Langer Wroclawski; Bruno Nahar; Andrey Soares; Ana Paula Cardoso; Nam Jin Kim; Fabricio Torres Carvalho
Journal:  Int Braz J Urol       Date:  2020 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.541

6.  Triaging Office Based Urology Procedures during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Authors:  Eric G Katz; Kristian D Stensland; Jessica A Mandeville; Lara S MacLachlan; Alireza Moinzadeh; Andrea Sorcini; Harras B Zaid; Laura Bukavina; Lee Ponsky; Sam S Chang
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 7.450

7.  Recommendations for Tiered Stratification of Urological Surgery Urgency in the COVID-19 Era.

Authors:  Howard B Goldman; George P Haber
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 7.450

8.  Clinical and surgical consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic for patients with pediatric urological problems: Statement of the EAU guidelines panel for paediatric urology, March 30 2020.

Authors:  Josine S L T Quaedackers; Raimund Stein; Nikita Bhatt; Hasan Serkan Dogan; Lisette Hoen; Rien J M Nijman; Christian Radmayr; Mesrur Selcuk Silay; Serdar Tekgul; Guy Bogaert
Journal:  J Pediatr Urol       Date:  2020-04-09       Impact factor: 1.830

9.  Endourological Stone Management in the Era of the COVID-19.

Authors:  Silvia Proietti; Franco Gaboardi; Guido Giusti
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2020-04-14       Impact factor: 20.096

10.  Clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients undergoing surgeries during the incubation period of COVID-19 infection.

Authors:  Shaoqing Lei; Fang Jiang; Wating Su; Chang Chen; Jingli Chen; Wei Mei; Li-Ying Zhan; Yifan Jia; Liangqing Zhang; Danyong Liu; Zhong-Yuan Xia; Zhengyuan Xia
Journal:  EClinicalMedicine       Date:  2020-04-05
View more
  22 in total

1.  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
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-06-14       Impact factor: 3.752

2.  Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on patients with obstructing urinary stones complicated by infection.

Authors:  Haim Herzberg; Ziv Savin; Rinat Lasmanovich; Ron Marom; Reuben Ben-David; Roy Mano; Ofer Yossepowitch; Mario Sofer
Journal:  BJUI Compass       Date:  2022-03-13

3.  Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Emergency Department Referrals with Urologic Complaints; a Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Anahita Ansari Jafari; Babak Javanmard; Amirhossein Rahavian; Ahmad Reza Rafiezadeh; Nasrin Borumandnia; Seyyed Ali Hojjati; Seyyed Mohammad Hosseininia; Hormoz Karami
Journal:  Arch Acad Emerg Med       Date:  2022-05-17

4.  COVID-19 and the urological practice: changes and future perspectives.

Authors:  Łukasz Nowak; Wojciech Krajewski; Paweł Kiełb; Anna Śliwa; Aleksandra Zdrojowy-Wełna; Romuald Zdrojowy
Journal:  Cent European J Urol       Date:  2020-08-01

5.  Uro-oncologic patient management during the COVID-19 pandemic: survey findings from an Italian oncologic hub.

Authors:  Stefano Luzzago; Francesco A Mistretta; Enza Dossena; Gianna Comandi; Giovanni Petralia; Dario Di Trapani; Gabriele Cozzi; Antonio Galfano; Matteo Ferro; Aldo M Bocciardi; Gennaro Musi; Ottavio de Cobelli
Journal:  Future Oncol       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 3.404

6.  "Tele-urology": Is the COVID-19 pandemic a wake-up call?

Authors:  Raed Almannie; Mana Almuhaideb; Meshari Alzahrani; Saleh Binsaleh; Fahad Alyami
Journal:  Urol Ann       Date:  2021-03-04

7.  Is there any association of COVID-19 with testicular pain and epididymo-orchitis?

Authors:  Caner Ediz; Hasan Huseyin Tavukcu; Serkan Akan; Yunus Emre Kizilkan; Adem Alcin; Kerem Oz; Omer Yilmaz
Journal:  Int J Clin Pract       Date:  2020-11-09       Impact factor: 3.149

8.  Impact of COVID-19 on clinical practice, income, health and lifestyle behavior of Brazilian urologists.

Authors:  Cristiano M Gomes; Luciano A Favorito; João Victor T Henriques; Alfredo F Canalini; Karin M J Anzolch; Roni de Carvalho Fernandes; Carlos H S Bellucci; Caroline S Silva; Marcelo L Wroclawski; Antonio Carlos L Pompeo; José de Bessa
Journal:  Int Braz J Urol       Date:  2020 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.541

9.  The experience of UK patients with bladder cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic: a survey-based snapshot.

Authors:  Sarah Spencer-Bowdage; Beth Russell; Jeannie Rigby; Jackie O'Kelly; Phil Kelly; Mark Page; Caroline Raw; Paula Allchorne; Peter Harper; Jeremy Crew; Roger Kockelbergh; Allen Knight; Mieke Van Hemelrijck; Richard T Bryan
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2020-11-16       Impact factor: 5.588

10.  'Overnight, things changed. Suddenly, we were in it': a qualitative study exploring how surgical teams mitigated risks of COVID-19.

Authors:  Daisy Elliott; Cynthia Ochieng; Marcus Jepson; Natalie S Blencowe; Kerry Nl Avery; Sangeetha Paramasivan; Sian Cousins; Anni Skilton; Peter Hutchinson; David Jayne; Martin Birchall; Jane M Blazeby; Jenny L Donovan; Leila Rooshenas
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-06-16       Impact factor: 2.692

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.