Literature DB >> 33684918

Phase 2 of the Coronavirus Pandemic in Urology: Ramping Up Surgical Caseload and Resident Training while COVID-19 Infections Decrease.

Hendrik Borgmann1, Katharina Boehm2, Maximilian Peter Brandt2, Mohammed M Kamal2, Rene Mager2, Thomas Höfner2, Igor Tsaur2, Axel Haferkamp2.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33684918      PMCID: PMC8018215          DOI: 10.1159/000513738

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Urol Int        ISSN: 0042-1138            Impact factor:   2.089


× No keyword cloud information.
Dear Editor, The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is disrupting urology healthcare worldwide [1]. Constraints on healthcare resources have led to prioritization strategies aiming to minimize patient harm during a time of reduced surgical caseload capacity [2]. In phase 2 of the pandemic, we experienced in our department decreasing COVID-19 in-hospital caseload over time, allowing for increasing surgical caseload for urology consultants and residents. Here, we aimed to investigate the course of urological surgical caseload in our department before and during the COVID-19 pandemic and its relationship to local COVID-19 infection load. We performed a retrospective analysis of all scheduled urology surgeries under general anaesthesia performed in our department during a time frame of 12 weeks between February 25, 2020, and May 15, 2020. To track the overall surgical caseload, we recorded the number of surgeries performed overall in the urology department. To track the surgical training of urology residents, we recorded the number of surgeries performed by urology residents. Simultaneously, the number of COVID-19-positive tested in-hospital patients was recorded. The 12-week time span was divided into 4 time periods of each successive 3 weeks: pre-COVID-19 time, lockdown time, resumption time, and back-to-normal time. Low prioritization pressure leads to cancellations of surgeries with low priority according to the 4-tired surgery prioritization list by the German Society of Urology at the beginning of the lockdown time [3], while all oncological cases could be continued irrespective of cancer entity or risk. At the beginning of the resumption time, stone surgery was resumed. At the beginning of the back-to-normal time, all surgeries were resumed. During 56 working days, we performed 537 surgeries under general anaesthesia, of which 162 (30%) were performed by urology residents. The median number of surgeries per day was 10 overall and 3 for urology residents. In-hospital COVID-19 caseload increased until a peak of 24 cases, remained stable, and decreased thereafter (median: 17.5; range: 7–24 cases). Overall and residents' surgical caseload, respectively, was 164 and 47 in the pre-COVID-19 time, decreased to 103 and 27 in the lockdown time, increased to 117 and 37 in the resumption time, and increased again to 153 and 51 in the back-to-normal time. One COVID-19 infection occurred in in-hospital urology patients during the 12-week time frame (0.2%). Figure 1 shows an inverse relation between the COVID-19 in-hospital caseload and the urological surgical caseload for both overall number of surgeries and surgeries performed by residents. Ramping up of surgical training for residents is particularly important since slowdown of learning and psychological impacts have been reported [4, 5].
Fig. 1

Inverse relation between COVID-19 in-hospital caseload and surgical caseload and resident training during different time spans before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.

Our single-institution data show that urological surgical caseload and resident training can be ramped up with decreasing COVID-19 infections, aiming to ensure perpetuation of adequate treatment for both oncological and non-oncological urology patients. Limitations include the retrospective study design and lack of data on patient-related outcomes. However, our data show that the burden of surgical caseload deferred due to COVID-19 can be worked off as COVID-19 infections decrease, aiming to minimize the collateral damage of morbimortality in urology patients [6].

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors have no potential conflict of interest.

Funding Sources

The authors did not receive any funding.

Author Contributions

Project development: H.B. and A.H. Data collection/management: all authors. Data analysis: H.B. Manuscript writing/editing: all authors.
  6 in total

1.  Urology in the Time of Coronavirus: Reduced Access to Urgent and Emergent Urological Care during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Outbreak in Italy.

Authors:  Angelo Porreca; Michele Colicchia; Daniele D'Agostino; Michele Amenta; Alfio Corsaro; Stefano Zaramella; Luisa Zegna; Fabrizio Gallo; Maurizio Schenone; Giorgio Bozzini; Alberto Calori; Antonio L Pastore; Yazan Al Salhi; Carmine Sciorio; Lorenzo Spirito; Virginia Varca; Carlo Marenghi; Francesco Greco; Vincenzo M Altieri; Paolo Verze; Ciro Barba; Alessandro Antonelli; Maria A Cerruto; Roberto Falabella; Silvana Di Bello; Costantino Leonardo; Antonio Tufano; Alessandro Volpe; Paolo Umari; Paolo Parma; Mattia Nidini; Giovannalberto Pini; Marco Borghesi; Carlo Terrone; Giovanni E Cacciamani; Maria C Sighinolfi; Gian Maria Busetto; Alexandra M Wennberg; Marinella Finocchiaro; Mario Falsaperla; Marco Oderda; Carlo Ceruti; Bernardo Rocco; Riccardo Schiavina; Lorenzo Bianchi; Andrea Mari; Fabrizio Di Maida; Orietta Dalpiaz; Antonio Celia; Marco Pirozzi; Pierluigi Bove; Valerio Iacovelli; Angelo Cafarelli; Luca Cindolo; Giovanni Ferrari; Lorenzo Gatti; Giacomo Pirola; Filippo Annino; Luigi Pucci; Daniele Romagnoli; Walter Artibani; Andrea Minervini
Journal:  Urol Int       Date:  2020-05-20       Impact factor: 2.089

2.  Slowdown of urology residents' learning curve during the COVID-19 emergency.

Authors:  Francesco Porpiglia; Enrico Checcucci; Daniele Amparore; Paolo Verri; Riccardo Campi; Francesco Claps; Franceso Esperto; Cristian Fiori; Giuseppe Carrieri; Vincenzo Ficarra; Roberto Mario Scarpa; Prokar Dasgupta
Journal:  BJU Int       Date:  2020-04-28       Impact factor: 5.588

3.  COVID-19 outbreak situation and its psychological impact among surgeons in training in France.

Authors:  Maher Abdessater; Morgan Rouprêt; Vincent Misrai; Ugo Pinar; Xavier Matillon; Bastien Gondran-Tellier; Lucas Freton; Maxime Vallée; Inès Dominique; Margaux Felber; Zine-Eddine Khene; Edouard Fortier; François Lannes; Clément Michiels; Tristan Grevez; Nicolas Szabla; Florian Bardet; Kevin Kaulanjan; Emilien Seizilles de Mazancourt; Guillaume Ploussard; Benjamin Pradere
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2020-04-24       Impact factor: 4.226

Review 4.  [Urology in the corona-virus pandemic-a guideline 4/20].

Authors:  M C Kriegmair; K F Kowalewski; B Lange; A Heininger; T Speck; H Haas; M S Michel
Journal:  Urologe A       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 0.639

5.  A systematic review on COVID-19: urological manifestations, viral RNA detection and special considerations in urological conditions.

Authors:  Vinson Wai-Shun Chan; Peter Ka-Fung Chiu; Chi-Hang Yee; Yuhong Yuan; Chi-Fai Ng; Jeremy Yuen-Chun Teoh
Journal:  World J Urol       Date:  2020-05-27       Impact factor: 4.226

6.  European Association of Urology Guidelines Office Rapid Reaction Group: An Organisation-wide Collaborative Effort to Adapt the European Association of Urology Guidelines Recommendations to the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Era.

Authors:  Maria J Ribal; Philip Cornford; Alberto Briganti; Thomas Knoll; Stavros Gravas; Marek Babjuk; Christopher Harding; Alberto Breda; Axel Bex; Jens J Rassweiler; Ali S Gözen; Giovannalberto Pini; Evangelos Liatsikos; Gianluca Giannarini; Alex Mottrie; Ramnath Subramaniam; Nikolaos Sofikitis; Bernardo M C Rocco; Li-Ping Xie; J Alfred Witjes; Nicolas Mottet; Börje Ljungberg; Morgan Rouprêt; Maria P Laguna; Andrea Salonia; Gernot Bonkat; Bertil F M Blok; Christian Türk; Christian Radmayr; Noam D Kitrey; Daniel S Engeler; Nicolaas Lumen; Oliver W Hakenberg; Nick Watkin; Rizwan Hamid; Jonathon Olsburgh; Julie Darraugh; Robert Shepherd; Emma-Jane Smith; Christopher R Chapple; Arnulf Stenzl; Hendrik Van Poppel; Manfred Wirth; Jens Sønksen; James N'Dow
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 20.096

  6 in total
  1 in total

1.  Aneurismal subarachnoid hemorrhage during the COVID-19 outbreak in a Hub and Spoke system: observational multicenter cohort study in Lombardy, Italy.

Authors:  Marco Maria Fontanella; Marco Cenzato; Alessandro Fiorindi; Marika Vezzoli; Francesco Doglietto; Luca Zanin; Giorgio Saraceno; Edoardo Agosti; Antonio Barbieri; Silvio Bellocchi; Claudio Bernucci; Daniele Bongetta; Andrea Cardia; Emanuele Costi; Marcello Egidi; Antonio Fioravanti; Roberto Gasparotti; Carlo Giussani; Gianluca Grimod; Nicola Latronico; Davide Locatelli; Dikran Mardighian; Giovanni Nodari; Jacopo Carlo Poli; Frank Rasulo; Elena Roca; Giovanni Marco Sicuri; Giannantonio Spena; Roberto Stefini; Oscar Vivaldi; Cesare Zoia; Stefano Calza
Journal:  Acta Neurochir (Wien)       Date:  2021-10-25       Impact factor: 2.216

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.