| Literature DB >> 32690870 |
Can Obek1, Tunkut Doganca2, Omer Burak Argun1, Ali Riza Kural1.
Abstract
Prostate cancer patients' management demands prioritization, adjustments, and a tailored approach during the unprecedented SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Benefit of care from treatment must be carefully weighed against the potential of infection and morbidity from COVID-19. Furthermore, urologists need to be cognizant of their obligation for wise consumption of restricted healthcare resources and protection of the safety of their coworkers. Nonurgent in-person clinic visits should be postponed or conducted remotely via phone or teleconference. Prostate cancer screening, imaging, and biopsies may be suspended in general. Treatment may be safely deferred in low and intermediate risk patients. Surgery may be delayed in most high-risk patients and neoadjuvant ADT is generally not advocated prior to surgery. Initiation of long-term ADT coupled with EBRT subsequent to the pandemic may be favored as a feasible alternative in high-risk and very high-risk disease. In patients with cN1 disease, treatment within 6 weeks is advocated. Presurgery assessment should include testing for COVID-19 and preferably a chest imaging. In the presence of SARS-CoV-2 infection, surgery should be postponed whenever possible. All protective measurements suggested by national/international authorities must to be diligently followed during perioperative period. Strict precautions specific to laparoscopic/robotic surgery are required, considering the unproven but potential risk of aerosolization of SARS-CoV-2 virus and spillage with pneumoperitoneum. Regarding radiotherapy, shortest safe EBRT regimen should be favored and prophylactic whole pelvic RT and brachytherapy avoided. Chemotherapy should be avoided whenever possible.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32690870 PMCID: PMC7371779 DOI: 10.1038/s41391-020-0258-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis ISSN: 1365-7852 Impact factor: 5.554
Summary of management recommendations for prostate cancer during acute phase of Covid-19 pandemic.
| Resource allocation | • Needs to be made by a triage committee. | |
| Tumor boards | • Should continue and be virtualized. | |
| Screening | • Not recommended for asymptomatic men. | |
| Biopsy | PSA < 10–20 ng/ml and DRE normal: | Biopsy may be suspended until deemed safe. |
| PSA > 10–20 ng/ml or DRE abnormal: | Consider biopsy within 3–4 months. | |
| Patient presenting with metastases: | ADT may be initiated, biopsy delayed until after pandemic. | |
| Clinical visits | • All nonurgent in-person clinic visits should be postponed or conducted remotely via telehealth communication. | |
| • In-person visit may be considered in patients with newly diagnosed advanced (cN1, metastatic) prostate cancer. | ||
| Treatment | ||
Low Very low Favorable intermediate risk | • Suggestion is against further staging, active surveillance confirmatory testing/monitoring and treatment. | |
| Unfavorable intermediate risk | • Further diagnostic interventions may be delayed in asymptomatic patients. | |
| • Surgery may be delayed up to 6–12 months and neoadjuvant ADT should not be used. | ||
| • Neoadjuvant ADT and EBRT may be an option. EBRT should preferably be hypofractionated and without fiducial marker or rectal spacer insertion. | ||
| • Brachytherapy needs to be avoided. | ||
High risk Very high risk | • Further staging is optional for new consults. | |
| • Surgery may be suspended up to 3–6 months. (Neoadjuvant ADT with surgery not recommended in general.) | ||
| • Neoadjuvant ADT and EBRT may be an option. EBRT should preferably be hypofractionated and without fiducial marker or rectal spacer insertion. | ||
| • Brachytherapy needs to be avoided. | ||
| cN1 | • Treatment is required within 6 weeks. | |
| • ADT + EBRT may be best option. | ||
| Low-volume metastatic | • If ADT + EBRT is considered, EBRT would rather be postponed until after pandemic. | |
| Metastatic hormone sensitive | • ADT + androgen receptor axis targeted therapy may be preferred. | |
| • The longest possible cycle frequency schedules of LHRHa therapy should be used. | ||
| • Chemotherapy and immunosuppressive drugs—including steroids—need to be avoided whenever possible. | ||
| Metastatic castration resistant | • Chemotherapy should be avoided whenever possible. | |
| • Androgen receptor axis targeted therapy should be favored, if not used before. | ||
| • Radium-223 may be preferred over chemotherapy in bone-only metastases. | ||
| • Agents decreasing the incidence of skeletal-related events may be avoided. | ||
| • Immunosuppressive agents such as steroids should be avoided. | ||
National Comprehensive Cancer Network risk stratification is used.
PSA prostate specific antigen, DRE digital rectal examination, ADT androgen deprivation therapy, EBRT external beam radiotherapy, LHRHa luteinizing hormone releasing hormone agonist.
Recommendations for surgery during Covid-19 pandemic.
| • Consent covering the risk of SARS-CoV-2 virus exposure and consequences should be obtained. |
| • Infection with virus should be sought in any patient requiring surgery by history, testing and preferably a recent chest imaging. |
| • In case of COVID-19 test positivity, the procedure should be postponed, unless extremely emergent. |
| • When surgery must be performed in a patient with known or suspected COVID-19 infection, procedures should be performed in dedicated ORs complying with the hospital recommendation for OR staff protection. Intubation and extubation should take place within a negative pressure room. |
| • In the presence of a negative COVID-19 PCR test result, all recommendations to mitigate SARS-CoV-2 transmission must be diligently followed. |
| • Electro-surgery units should be set at the lowest possible settings. |
| • There are precautions specific to laparoscopy/robotic surgery that need to be fulfilled. |
| • There is yet no evidence to indicate that SARS-CoV-2 virus is present in CO2 aerosol; however, erring on the side of safety would warrant treating SARS-CoV-2 as exhibiting infectious aerosolization. |
| • Efforts should be made to limit cautery plume creation and uncontrolled CO2 release into the OR. |
| • Insufflation pressure should be kept to the lowest acceptable level offering a safe operating space and maintain visibility. |
| • For robot-assisted laparoscopy, the use of intelligent integrated insufflation systems is recommended. |
| • Laparoscopic suction devices should ideally be connected to a filtered device with an ULPA or HEPA filter. |
| • Prior to specimen extraction, closure, trocar removal, or conversion to open, all pneumoperitoneum should be safely evacuated via a filtration system. |
OR operating room, ULPA ultralow particulate air, HEPA high-efficiency particulate air.