| Literature DB >> 33209106 |
G Luis Pendola1, Roberto Elizalde2, Pablo Sitic Vargas3, José Caicedo Mallarino4, Eduardo González5, José Parada6, Mauricio Camus7, Ricardo Schwartz8, Enrique Bargalló9, Ruffo Freitas10, Mauricio Magalhaes Costa11, Vilmar Marques de Oliveira10, Paula Escobar12, Miguel Oller13, Luis Fernando Viaña14, Antonio Jurado Bambino15, Gustavo Sarria16, Francisco Terrier17, Roger Corrales18, Valeria Sanabria19, Juan Carlos Rodríguez Agostini20, Gonzalo Vargas Chacón21, Víctor Manuel Pérez22, Verónica Avilés23, José Galarreta16, Guillermo Laviña24, Jorge Pérez Fuentes20, Lía Bueso de Castellanos25, Bolívar Arboleda Osorio26, Herbert Castillo27, Claudia Figueroa28.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The COVID-19 pandemic has changed health systems across the world, both in general hospitals and in oncology institutes or centres.For cancer specialists, particularly breast cancer (BC), the COVID-19 pandemic represents a combination of challenges since the hospital resources and staff have become more limited; this has obliged oncology specialists to seek a consensus and establish which patients with BC require more urgent attention and which patients can wait until there is a better control of this pandemic. The health system in Latin America has some special characteristics; in some of the countries, there are shortages which limit access to several specialities (surgery, clinical oncology and radiotherapy) in some regions.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; coronavirus; survey method
Year: 2020 PMID: 33209106 PMCID: PMC7652542 DOI: 10.3332/ecancer.2020.1115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecancermedicalscience ISSN: 1754-6605
Figure 1.COVID-19: Progression of confirmed cases in Latin America, USA, Spain and China graph. Adapted from BBC News Mundo. Coronavirus en América Latina: 7 gráficos para entender el avance de la pandemia de COVID-19 en la región. BBC. 2020 [cited 2020 Apr 27]. Available at: https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-52405371.
Society/number of members/percentage of responses per country.
| Country | Number of members | Numbers of responses per country (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Argentina | 743 | 98 (13.18) |
| Ecuador | 90 | 85 (94.4) |
| Venezuela | 350 | 64 (18.28) |
| Mexico | 800 | 63 (7.87) |
| Brazil | 2000 | 39 (1.95) |
| Chile | 140 | 35 (25) |
| Peru | 143 | 25 (17.4) |
| Colombia | 144 | 25 (17.36) |
| Bolivia | 75 | 21 (28) |
| Paraguay | 46 | 10 (21.73) |
| Uruguay | 106 | 9 (8.49) |
Societies that reported the number of members.
Figure 2.Participating countries and their responses.
Figure 3.Sociodemographic characteristics of the specialist (AGE).
Figure 4.State of the hospital of the respondents during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Figure 5.Agreement on the necessity that the assessment of a patient with a recent diagnosis of cancer should be in person during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Figure 6.Type of consultation for postoperative assessment and revision of anatomical pathology.
Figure 7.Agreement on follow-up of asymptomatic patients, post-treatment by tele-consultation during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Summary of the different situations posed in the survey, the number and percentage of the responses according to the three options (agree, disagree, and neither agree nor disagree) sent by the respondents, and the recommendations related to the percentage of consensus or dissent on the management of breast disease during this time of the COVID-19 pandemic.
| Description of situations posed | Responses of those surveyed according to the options posed | Recommendations based on the survey | Consensus/no consensus/majority | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agree | Disagree | Neither agree nor disagree | |||
| Consultation | Should a face-to-face consultation be carried out for patients with a histologically confirmed diagnosis of BC? | 450 (90 ) | 31 (6) | 18 (4) | Consensus on the need for a face-to-face consultation |
| Should appointments for | 463 (93) | 31 (6) | 5 (1) | There is a consensus that the revision of reports or post-treatment follow-up should be carried out by teleconsultation | |
| Should the postoperative assessment for the revision of anatomical pathology be in person? | 199 (40) | 278 (56) | 22 (4) | There is no consensus that the assessment of anatomical pathology should be in person | |
| Should it be the specialist who carries out the teleconsultation? | 424 (85) | 58 (12) | 17 (3) | Consensus: the Surgical Oncologist or Breast Care specialist | |
| Should a triage be carried out by teleconsultation in the case of needing a face-to-face consultation | 457 (91) | 33 (7) | 9 (2) | There is consensus in carrying out triage via telemedicine to search for suspected cases of COVID-19, in accordance with the current epidemiological criteria of their countries | |
| Patients whose condition puts their life in immediate danger are clinically unstable and who even a brief delay in care would significantly alter their prognosis should be assessed in person | 470 (94) | 23 (5) | 6 (1) | Consensus on the need for a face-to-face consultation | |
| Should follow-up for patients with benign disease or follow-up consultations of surviving patients be delayed until after the pandemic? | 480 (96) | 16 (3) | 3 (1) | Consensus in delaying the consultation until after the pandemic, they should be seen using tele-consultation | |
| Imaging | Lesions BI-RADS 3 or patients who need routine imaging could be delayed until after the pandemic | 412 (83) | 67 (13) | 20 (4) | Consensus in postponing until after the pandemic |
| During the pandemic, diagnostic imaging should be carried out for abnormal mammographies, suspicions of cancer, biopsies of lesions BI-RADS 4, patients who require an MRI to evaluate the extent of disease | 445 (89) | 41 (8) | 13 (3) | Consensus in not postponing imaging, nor delaying taking biopsies on BI-RADS IV lesions | |
| Treatments | Regarding diagnostic surgical procedures for non-suspicious lesions, should they be delayed until after the pandemic? | 444 (89) | 49 (10) | 6 (1) | |
| Regarding the delay of a patient’s surgical treatment after having finished their neoadjuvant treatment | 227 (46) | 251 (50) | 21 (4) | There was no consensus in delaying surgical treatment after finishing neoadjuvant treatment | |
| Regarding the use of local anaesthesia as an alternative in surgical treatment during the pandemic | 269 (54) | 166 (33) | 64 (13) | There was no consensus for the use of local anaesthesia in the surgical treatment of BC during the pandemic | |
| Regarding postponing surgical treatment in patients with DCIS until after the pandemic | 277 (55) | 188 (38) | 34 (7) | There was no consensus on the possibility of delaying surgery in patients with DCIS | |
| Regarding patients operated on with early-stage, ER-positive tumours, could they receive radiotherapy treatment before adjuvant chemotherapy during the pandemic? | 284 (57) | 136 (27) | 79 (16) | There was no consensus over the possibility that patients with early-stage, ER-positive BC could receive radiotherapy before chemotherapy during the pandemic | |
| A COVID test should be carried out on every patient who is going to undergo surgery for BC | 381 (76) | 86 (17) | 32 (7) | The majority answered that a COVID test should be performed | |
| All delayed breast reconstructions (DBR) should be postponed until after the pandemic | 424 (85) | 64 (13) | 11 (2) | Consensus that DBR should be postponed until after the pandemic | |
| Should all breast reconstructions (BR) with autologous tissues be postponed until after the pandemic? | 393 (79) | 88 (18) | 18 (3) | Consensus that BR with autologous tissues should be postponed until after the pandemic | |
| Should the surgery for compromised microscopic margins and axilla staging be deferred until after the pandemic? | 330 (66) | 137 (28) | 32 (6) | The was no consensus in postponing the re-operation on patients with compromised margins and axilla staging | |
| Should patients chosen for conservative surgery have their surgical treatment regardless of the pandemic? | 428 (86) | 49 (10) | 22 (4) | Consensus in not postponing surgery | |
| Should triple-negative and HER2-/Neu-positive patients continue treatments already underway? | 475 (95) | 11 (2) | 13 (3) | Consensus in not stopping nor postponing treatments underway in HER2-/Neu-positive and triple-negative patients | |
| Patients with locally advanced or inflammatory BC could postpone their treatment until after the pandemic? | 59 (12) | 408 (82) | 32 (6) | There is no consensus in delaying treatment in patients with locally advanced BC | |
Figure 8.Response to the possibility of delaying surgical treatment after having finished their neoadjuvant treatment during COVID-19 pandemic.
Figure 9.Response to the possibility of deferring re-operation on patients with positive axila or compromised borders during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Figure 10.Response to the possibility of delaying treatment with radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced cancer during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Societies surveyed and their president or representative.
| Societies surveyed | President or representative |
|---|---|
| Argentinian Society of Mastology (SAM) | Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez |
| Ecuadorian Society of Breast Pathology (SEPAM) | Dr. Antonio Jurado B. |
| Bolivian Society of Mastology (SBM) | Dr. Roger Corrales |
| Colombian Association of Mastology (ACM) | Dr. Luis Fernando Viaña |
| Uruguayan Society of Mastology (SUM) | Dr. Guillermo Laviña |
| Chilean Society of Mastology | Dr. Paula Escobar |
| Mexican Association of Mastology (AMM) | Dr. Víctor Manuel Pérez |
| Brazilian Society of Mastology (SBM) | Dr. Vilmar Marques de Oliveira |
| Dominican Society of Surgery | Dr. Miguel Oller |
| Peruvian Society of Mastology | Dr. José Galarreta |
| Paraguayan Society of Mastology | Dr. Valeria Sanabria |
| Venezuelan Society of Mastology | Dr. Jorge Pérez Fuentes |
| Costa Rican Society of Mastology | Dr. Gonzalo Vargas Chacón |
| Nicaraguan Mastology Association | Dr. Verónica Avilés |
| Honduran Mastology Society | Dr. Lía Bueso de Castellanos |
| Puerto Rican Society of Mastology | Dr. Bolívar Arboleda Osorio |
| Guatemalan Society of Mastology | Dr. Herbert Castillo |
| El Salvador Society of Mastology | Dr. Claudia Figueroa |