Operative versus non-operative management in acute surgical diseases during COVID-19 pandemic: a 30-day experience from an Italian hospital in Lombardy.

IF 1.3 Q3 Medicine
Minerva chirurgica Pub Date : 2020-12-01 Epub Date: 2020-09-25 DOI:10.23736/S0026-4733.20.08391-1
Marta Spalluto, Emanuele Bevilacqua, Gianandrea Baldazzi, Diletta Cassini
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The spread of COVID-19 pandemic has determined a huge imbalance between real clinical needs of the population and effective resources availability. The aim of this study was to report how this situation forces surgeons to consider a non-operative management as an alternative. This is a retrospective monocentric study and we collected data from 60 patients, split in two groups: info from Group A, 28 patients (11 March to 11 April 2020) were compared with info from group B, 32 patients (11 March to 11 April 2019). The most relevant difference between the groups is related to patient's clinical management. The two groups had a considerably different number of cases that were treated with an operative management: 18 cases (64,7%) in group A vs. 28 cases (87,5%) in group B. Otherwise, non-operative approach occurred in 10 cases (35,7%) in group A and only in 4 patients (12,5%) in group B. These data suggest that the drastic reduction of means narrows the range of therapeutic choices. Indeed, in this emergency scenario, the rationing of healthcare resources was the propelling for surgeons to consider alternative therapeutic pathways.

COVID-19大流行期间急性外科疾病的手术与非手术治疗:伦巴第一家意大利医院的30天经验
COVID-19大流行的蔓延决定了人口的实际临床需求与有效资源之间的巨大不平衡。本研究的目的是报告这种情况如何迫使外科医生考虑非手术治疗作为替代方案。这是一项回顾性单中心研究,我们收集了60名患者的数据,分为两组:a组28名患者(2020年3月11日至4月11日)的信息与B组32名患者(2019年3月11日至4月11日)的信息进行比较。两组之间最相关的差异与患者的临床管理有关。两组采用手术治疗的病例数有很大差异:a组18例(66.7%),b组28例(87.5%)。另外,a组10例(35,7%)出现非手术入路,b组只有4例(12,5%)。这些数据表明,平均数的急剧减少缩小了治疗选择的范围。事实上,在这种紧急情况下,医疗资源的配给是外科医生考虑替代治疗途径的推动力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Minerva chirurgica
Minerva chirurgica 医学-外科
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Minerva Chirurgica publishes scientific papers on surgery. Manuscripts may be submitted in the form of editorials, original articles, review articles, case reports, special articles, letters to the Editor and guidelines. The journal aims to provide its readers with papers of the highest quality and impact through a process of careful peer review and editorial work.
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