| Literature DB >> 35307746 |
J Noll1, M Reichert1, M Dietrich2, J G Riedel1, M Hecker3, W Padberg1, M A Weigand2, A Hecker4.
Abstract
Since the eruption of the worldwide SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in late 2019/early 2020, multiple elective surgical interventions were postponed. Through pandemic measures, elective operation capacities were reduced in favour of intensive care treatment for critically ill SARS-CoV-2 patients. Although intermittent low-incidence infection rates allowed an increase in elective surgery, surgeons have to include long-term pulmonary and extrapulmonary complications of SARS-CoV-2 infections (especially "Long Covid") in their perioperative management considerations and risk assessment procedures. This review summarizes recent consensus statements and recommendations regarding the timepoint for surgical intervention after SARS-CoV-2 infection released by respective German societies and professional representatives including DGC/BDC (Germany Society of Surgery/Professional Association of German Surgeons e.V.) and DGAI/BDA (Germany Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine/Professional Association of German Anesthesiologists e.V.) within the scope of the recent literature. The current literature reveals that patients with pre- and perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infection have a dramatically deteriorated postoperative outcome. Thereby, perioperative mortality is mainly caused by pulmonary and thromboembolic complications. Notably, perioperative mortality decreases to normal values over time depending on the duration of SARS-CoV-2 infection.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Operation; Pandemic; Postponement; SARS-CoV-2; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35307746 PMCID: PMC8934603 DOI: 10.1007/s00423-022-02495-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Langenbecks Arch Surg ISSN: 1435-2443 Impact factor: 2.895
Fig. 1Common immunomodulatory effects of SARS-CoV-2 infection and surgical therapy on postoperative mortality. Both SARS-CoV-2 infection and surgical therapy lead to hyperactivation of macrophages through tissue damage of various causes, which first leads to local hyperinflammation. In the following course, a systemic cytokine storm may occur. In this line, lymphopenia and neutrophilia are induced. These SARS-CoV-2 driven effects on the immune system negatively influence on postoperative immune competence of patients and lead to severe postoperative complications such as ARDS, sepsis and thromboembolism. The question now concerns the impact of perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infection on postoperative mortality. ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; PAMPS, pathogen-associated molecular patterns; DAMPS, damage-associated molecular patterns; IL-6, interleukin-6, TNF-α, tumour necrosis factor-α (modified from [75]; Icons from [76, 77])
Fig. 2The different diseases phases of SARS-CoV-2 infection in relation to the severity of COVID-19. The initial phase is characterized by mild infection with cough and fever or even presents asymptomatically. Blood examinations might give evidence for lymphopenia and neutrophilia. The prognosis at this stage is very good. In case of progression of the infection, a transition to a pulmonary phase with clinical and morphological development of pneumonia can be found, which makes frequently hospitalization necessary. The prognosis depends on the severity of pulmonary function impairment or respiratory insufficiency and comorbidities of the affected patients. Transition to the 3rd phase results in the development of a systemic extrapulmonary syndrome with a systemic increase in proinflammatory markers. The prognosis is poor due to the development of sepsis with multiple organ failure and/or ARDS (modified from [96])
Summary of selective publications on perioperative outcome after SARS-CoV-2 infection
| Authors | Title | Journal | Publication date | Country | Study design | Period of surgery | Sample size | Diagnosis/start of COVID-19 infection | Examined perioperative period (detection of SARS-CoV-2 infection) | Mortality | Most common complications | Recommendation distance from operation to SARS-CoV-2 infection | Some limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lei et al. [ | Clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients undergoing surgeries during the incubation period of COVID-19 infection | EClinicalMedicine (The Lancet) | April/2020 | China (Hubei province, Wuhan) | Retrospective cohort study | 01/2020–02/2020 | 34 | Onset of clinical symptoms | During the incubation period of COVID-19 infection | 20.5% (patients with perioperative COVID-19 infection), no comparison group | Pneumonia, ARDS, secondary infection | Preoperative quarantine period, exclusion of new COVID-19 infection | Small sample size, PCR tests preoperative not performed as standard |
| CovidSurg Collaborative [ | Mortality and pulmonary complications in patients undergoing surgery with perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infection: an international cohort study | The Lancet | May/2020 | international (24 countries, predominantly Europe and North America) | Retrospective cohort study | 01/2020–03/2020 | 1128 | PCR test or clinical suspicion or radiological signs | 7 days preoperative to 30 days postoperative | 30-day mortality rate: 23.8% (perioperative COVID-19 infection), 43.1% (emergency surgery, postoperative COVID-19 diagnosis, pulmonary complications), no comparison group | Pulmonary complications | Generous postponement of operations, balancing the consequences of postponed surgery and expected postoperative mortality with perioperative COVD-19 infection (risk factors: male and advanced age) | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
| Kahlberg et al. [ | Vascular surgery during COVID-19 emergency in Hub Hospitals of Lombardy: experience on 305 patients | European Journal of Vascular & Endovascular Surgery | November/2020 | Italy (Lombardy) | Prospective study | 03/2020–04/2020 | 305 | PCR test and clinical suspicion with radiological signs | Pre- and postoperative | COVID vs non-COVID patient: In-hospital mortality: 25% vs 6%, Elective: 20.0% vs 2.8%, Emergent: 27.9% vs 13.2% | Multiorgan failure, respiratory failure | In surgical planning: consider COVID-19 infection as a negative prognostic factor (pulmonary and vascular complications) | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
| Mi et al. [ | Characteristics and Early Prognosis of COVID-19 Infection in Fracture Patients | The Journal of Bone And Joint Surgery | May/2020 | China (Hubei province, Wuhan) | Retrospective cohort study | 01/2020–02/2020 | 10 | PCR test and/or radiological signs | COVID-19 infection before admission, postoperative | Of 2 patients with COVID-19 infection detected by PCR test and surgical treatment 1 died | Pulmonary complications | Surgical treatment should be carried out cautiously or non-operative care should be chosen | Very small sample size, not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
| COVIDSurg Collaborative [ | Delaying surgery for patients with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection | British Journal of Surgery | November/2020 | International (16 countries, predominantly Italy, UK, Spain) | Prospective cohort study | 01/2020–03/2020 | 122 | PCR test | preoperative | 30-day mortality 3.4% (all patients with positive PCR test), 7.7% (1–2 weeks after positive PCR test), 3–4% (2–4 weeks after positive PCR test), 0% (> 4 weeks after positive PCR test), no comparison group | Pulmonary complications (10.7% COVID-19 infection vs 3.6% no COVID-19 infection) | Postponement of surgery > 4 weeks after positive PCR result | Small sample size |
| Doglietto et al. [ | Factors associated with surgical mortality and complications among patients with and without coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Italy | JAMA Surgery | June/2020 | Italy (Brescia) | Retrospective cohort study | 02/2020–04/2020 | 123 | PCR test and/or radiological signs (chest radiography and/or computed tomography) | Preoperative or within 1 week after surgery | COVID vs non-COVID patient: 30-day mortality: 19.51% vs 2.44% | Pulmonary and thrombotic complications | Postpone surgery if possible, because of increased mortality has been demonstrated | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis, single-center study |
| Catton et al. [ | Planned surgery in the COVID-19 pandemic: a prospective cohort study from Nottingham | Langenbeck’ s Archives of Surgery | May/2021 | UK (Nottingham) | Prospective cohort study | 03/2020–04/2020 | 597 | PCR test confirmed suspected cases (temperature measurement and questionnaire or imaging) | 2 days preoperative to 30 days postoperative | 30-day mortality: 0.7% (all postoperative patients)vs 25% (postoperative patients with COVID-19 infection) | No information | Patient should be informed about increased mortality rate in COVID-19 infection after surgery. Urgent and cancer operations can take place with a low incidence of COVID-19 infection | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis, mortality not clearly attributable to COVID19 infection (e.g. palliative situation) small number of COVID-19 diagnosis or suspected COVID-19 infections (18 patients) |
| Jonker et al. [ | Perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infections increase mortality, pulmonary complications and thromboembolic events: a Dutch, multicenter, matched-cohort clinical study | Surgery | September/2020 | Netherlands | Retro- and prospective cohort study | 02/2020–06/2020 | 558 screened for the study, 503 included in data analysis | PCR test or clinical suspicion plus radiological signs (computed tomography of the chest) | 30 days before surgery or within 30 days postoperatively | COVID vs non-COVID patient: 30-day mortality: 12% vs 4% | Pulmonary and thromboembolic complications | Postponing elective surgeries and, if possible, emergency surgeries, altered protocols of thromboembolic prophylaxis | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
| COVIDSurg Collaborative & GlobalSurg Collaborative [ | Timing of surgery following SARS-CoV-2 infection: an international prospective cohort study | Anaesthesia | March/2021 | International (116 countries) | prospective cohort study | 10/2020 | 140 231 | PCR test or rapid antigen test or computed tomography of the chest or antibody test or clinical suspicion | Preoperative | 30-day mortality (weeks after COVID-19 diagnosis): 9.1% (0–2 weeks), 6.9% (3–4 weeks), 5.5% (5–6 weeks), 2% (> 7 weeks), 1.4% (no preoperative COVID-19 infection) | Pulmonary complications | Postpone surgery > 7 weeks after COVID-19 infection, longer for patients with persistent symptoms | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
| National emergency laparotomy audit [ | The impact of COVID-19 on emergency laparotomy – an interim report of the national emergency laparotomy audit | Royal College of Anaesthetists | March/2021 | England and Wales | Retrospective cohort study | 03/2020–09/2020 | 10,546 | PCR test or clinical suspicion | Pre- and postoperative | COVID vs non-COVID patient: 30-day mortality: 12.5% vs 7.2% | No data | Due to increased postoperative mortality with COVID-19 infection, high-risk patients should be offered alternative/conservative therapies | Not always PCR test used for diagnosis |
PCR, polymerase chain reaction [8, 102–110]
Fig. 3The CovidSurg Mortality Score. To estimate postoperative mortality, age, ASA and pulmonary and cardiac comorbidities are considered.
Modified from https://covidsurgrisk.app and [140]
Fig. 4Individual and interdisciplinary factors in elective surgery planning. Summary of individual and interdisciplinary factors influencing the planning of operations in patients with and without perioperative SARS-CoV-2 infection. The SARS-CoV-2 icons by [76]