Impact of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on pancreatic cancer services and treatment pathways: United Kingdom experience.
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McKay, Siobhan CPathak, Samir
Wilkin, Richard J W
Kamarajah, Sivesh K
Wigmore, Stephen J
Rees, Jonathan
Dunne, Declan F J
Garcea, Giuseppe
Ahmad, Jawad
de Liguori Carino, Nicola
Sultana, Asma
Silva, Mike
Lykoudis, Pavlos
Nasralla, David
Milburn, James
Shah, Nehal
Kocher, Hemant M
Bhogal, Ricky
Baron, Ryan D
Navarro, Alex
Halle-Smith, James
Al-Sarireh, Bilal
Sen, Gourab
Jamieson, Nigel B
Briggs, Christopher
Stell, David
Aroori, Somaiah
Bowles, Matthew
Kanwar, Aditya
Harper, Simon
Menon, Krishna
Prachalias, Andreas
Srinivasan, Parthi
Frampton, Adam E
Jones, Claire
Arshad, Ali
Tait, Iain
Spalding, Duncan
Young, Alastair L
Durkin, Damien
Ghods-Ghorbani, Manijeh
Sutcliffe, Robert P
Roberts, Keith J
Publication date
2021-03-19
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Introduction: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic presented healthcare providers with an extreme challenge to provide cancer services. The impact upon the diagnostic and treatment capacity to treat pancreatic cancer is unclear. This study aimed to identify national variation in treatment pathways during the pandemic. Methods: A survey was distributed to all United Kingdom pancreatic specialist centres, to assess diagnostic, therapeutic and interventional services availability, and alterations in treatment pathways. A repeating methodology enabled assessment over time as the pandemic evolved. Results: Responses were received from all 29 centres. Over the first six weeks of the pandemic, less than a quarter of centres had normal availability of diagnostic pathways and a fifth of centres had no capacity whatsoever to undertake surgery. As the pandemic progressed services have gradually improved though most centres remain constrained to some degree. One third of centres changed their standard resectable pathway from surgery-first to neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Elderly patients, and those with COPD were less likely to be offered treatment during the pandemic. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected the capacity of the NHS to provide diagnostic and staging investigations for pancreatic cancer. The impact of revised treatment pathways has yet to be realised.Citation
McKay SC, Pathak S, Wilkin RJW, Kamarajah SK, Wigmore SJ, Rees J, Dunne DFJ, Garcea G, Ahmad J, de Liguori Carino N, Sultana A, Silva M, Lykoudis P, Nasralla D, Milburn J, Shah N, Kocher HM, Bhogal R, Baron RD, Navarro A, Halle-Smith J, Al-Sarireh B, Sen G, Jamieson NB, Briggs C, Stell D, Aroori S, Bowles M, Kanwar A, Harper S, Menon K, Prachalias A, Srinivasan P, Frampton AE, Jones C, Arshad A, Tait I, Spalding D, Young AL, Durkin D, Ghods-Ghorbani M, Sutcliffe RP, Roberts KJ. Impact of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on pancreatic cancer services and treatment pathways: United Kingdom experience. HPB (Oxford). 2021 Nov;23(11):1656-1665. doi: 10.1016/j.hpb.2021.03.003. Epub 2021 Mar 19Type
ArticleAdditional Links
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1477-2574PMID
34544628Journal
HPBPublisher
Elsevierae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.hpb.2021.03.003