2022
DOI: 10.21037/jtd-22-5
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Report on lung cancer surgery during COVID-19 pandemic at a high volume US institution

Abstract: Background: The impact of COVID-19 has been felt in every field of medicine. We sought to understand how lung cancer surgery was affected at a high volume institution. We hypothesized that patients would wait longer for surgery, have more advanced tumors, and experience more complications during the COVID-19 crisis.Methods: A retrospective review was conducted, comparing pathologically confirmed non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) surgical cases performed in 2019 to cases performed from March to May 2020, durin… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…The most remarkable characteristic of their system is that only 3 of the more than 20 items make direct reference to oncological criteria, with all remaining items taking into account the clinical status of the patient (dyspnea, cough, pain, gastrointestinal reflux, anxiety, etc.) (14). This is in stark contrast to the published national and international…”
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confidence: 69%
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“…The most remarkable characteristic of their system is that only 3 of the more than 20 items make direct reference to oncological criteria, with all remaining items taking into account the clinical status of the patient (dyspnea, cough, pain, gastrointestinal reflux, anxiety, etc.) (14). This is in stark contrast to the published national and international…”
mentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Despite Dolan et al reporting an equivalent median waiting time from final clinic visit to surgery to the normal waiting time, they do report a clear decrease in the number of surgeries performed between March and May 2020 ( 14 ). This, as they note in their paper, might be due to a possible bias in the evaluation of their screening system, as in this study they were only able to recruit surgical patients and were unable to include patients whose diagnosis was delayed, who were referred for non-surgical treatments, or those who were lost to follow-up and reappeared after the peak of the pandemic.…”
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confidence: 99%
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