| Literature DB >> 33482377 |
Ashorne K Mahenthiran1, Jay P Natarajan2, Daniel J Bertges3, Kristopher M Huffman4, Jens Eldrup-Jorgensen5, Gary W Lemmon6.
Abstract
In response to the pandemic, an abrupt pivot of VQI physician members away from standard clinical practice to a restrictive phase of emergent and urgent vascular procedures occurred. The Society for Vascular Surgery Patient Safety Organization queried both data managers and physicians in May 2020. Approximately three fourths (74%) of physicians adopted restrictive operating policies for urgent and emergent cases only, while one half proceeded with 'time sensitive' elective cases as urgent. Data manager case entry was negatively affected by both low case volumes and staffing due to re-assignment or furlough. Venous registry volumes were reduced five-fold in 1st Quarter of 2020 compared to a similar period in 2019. The consequences of delaying vascular procedures for ambulatory venous practice remain unknown with increased morbidity likely. Challenges to determine venous thromboembolism mortality impact exist given difficulty in verifying 'in home and extended care facility' deaths. Further ramifications of a pandemic shutdown will likely be amplified if postponement of elective vascular care extends beyond a short window of time. It will be important to monitor disease progression and case severity as a result of policy shifts adopted locally in response to pandemic surges.Entities:
Keywords: Covid-19; VQI venous registry; clinical practice shift; physician survey
Year: 2021 PMID: 33482377 PMCID: PMC7816572 DOI: 10.1016/j.jvsv.2021.01.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vasc Surg Venous Lymphat Disord
Fig 1Graph showing Vascular Quality Initiative (VQI) registry data of weekly vascular surgical procedure volumes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Week 1 = January 4; week 5 = February 1. Line at week 11 showing a steep drop-off in case volume after March 15, 2020. IVCF, Inferior vena cava filter; VV = varicose vein.
Fig 2Graph comparing 4-week average procedural volume in 2019 for varicose vein (VV) and inferior vena cava (IVC) registries to Vascular Quality Initiative (VQI) data during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. The number over the red and blue lines represents percent change in a 4-week volume during weeks 5-8 and weeks 10-13. For reference: week 1 = January 4; week 5 = February 1; March 15 = week 11 when national shutdown occurred.
Average weekly registry procedure volumes 2018-2020
| Procedure volume | Weeks 6-9 | Weeks 10-13 | Comparison change (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | |||
| VV | 120 | 127.75 | 6.5 |
| IVC | 33 | 31.5 | −4.5 |
| 2019 | |||
| VV | 126.25 | 115.25 | −8.7 |
| IVC | 34 | 30.5 | −10.3 |
| 2020 | |||
| VV | 122 | 55.75 | −54.3 |
| IVC | 27 | 22 | −18.5 |
IVC, Inferior vena cava; VV, varicose vein.
Table demonstrating average weekly volumes for weeks 6-9 and weeks 10-13 in the first quarter of 2018-2020. A 6.2-fold decrease in VV volume and a 1.8-fold decrease in IVC filter volume from 2019 to 2020 are demonstrated. This represents a fivefold reduction for all 2020 venous procedures compared with 2019.
Fig 3Graph demonstrating a sample of regional distribution from high procedural volume centers of varicose vein (VV) and vena cava filter insertion. The first quarter weeks 1-13 listed for 2019 and 2020. March 15 = week 11 when national shutdown occurred. VQI, Vascular Quality Initiative.