严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2型感染与需要手术干预的血栓性并发症之间的关系:一项系统综述。

Jennifer J Ferraro, Allie Reynolds, Sylvia Edoigiawerie, Michelle Y Seu, Sydney R Horen, Amir Aminzada, Alireza Hamidian Jahromi
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)是2019冠状病毒病(新冠肺炎)感染的原因,其几个独特的临床特征已被识别和表征。其中一个特征,主要发生在严重新冠肺炎感染的患者中,被称为新冠肺炎诱导的凝血障碍。有新冠肺炎感染史或活动性感染的外科患者术后血栓性并发症的风险显著较高。这些患者可能需要手术干预来治疗严重的血栓性并发症。很少有研究能更好地描述这种关联。本研究的目的是对导致需要手术干预的血栓并发症的新冠肺炎感染文献进行系统回顾和荟萃分析。我们假设近期或活动性新冠肺炎感染的患者动脉和静脉血栓栓塞并发症发生率较高。目的:对新冠肺炎感染导致需要手术干预的血栓并发症的文献进行系统回顾和荟萃分析。方法:目前的系统综述采用算法方法,使用系统综述的首选报告项目和荟萃分析原则,对新冠肺炎血栓并发症所需手术干预的所有现有英文医学文献进行综述。在“PubMed”、“Scopus”、“Google Scholar”整形外科和重建外科的100强结果和档案中,使用关键词“新冠肺炎”和“外科手术”和“血栓栓塞症”和“并发症”对医学文献进行了全面检索。生成了搜索字符串,并排除了不特定于新冠肺炎感染引起的手术干预或血栓并发症的记录。两位作者对标题和摘要进行了筛选,并对全文文章的合格性和入选性进行了评估。最后,对结果进行了进一步细化,重点关注关注新冠肺炎血栓并发症所需的外科干预措施的文章。结果:应用纳入/排除标准后,数据库搜索最终纳入了22项回顾性研究。在纳入的研究中,17项为单一病例报告,3项为病例系列,2项为横断面队列研究。所有研究都具有回顾性。报告的研究中有12项在美利坚合众国进行,其余研究来自意大利、土耳其、巴基斯坦、法国、塞尔维亚和德国。我们研究中报告的所有病例均为实验室确诊的严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2型阳性。在本综述中纳入的22项研究中,共分离出70例涉及手术干预的病例。结论:缺乏描述新冠肺炎感染与血栓并发症之间关系的数据,因此需要手术干预。肠缺血和急性肢体缺血是新冠肺炎最常见的血栓事件,需要手术治疗。因血栓性并发症接受手术的患者术后总死亡率为30%,其中大多数死亡发生在肠缺血患者身上。医生应该意识到,尽管进行了血栓预防,但在这一患者群体中仍可能发生严重的血栓并发症,然而,除了缺血性肠切除术外,手术干预的死亡率相对较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Associations between SARS-CoV-2 infections and thrombotic complications necessitating surgical intervention: A systematic review.

Associations between SARS-CoV-2 infections and thrombotic complications necessitating surgical intervention: A systematic review.

Background: Several unique clinical features of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the cause of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection, have been identified and characterized. One such feature, mostly among patients with severe COVID-19 infection, has become known as COVID-19-induced coagulopathy. Surgical patients with a history of or active COVID-19 infection bear a significantly higher risk for postoperative thrombotic complications. These patients may require surgical intervention to treat severe thrombotic complications. Few studies have been carried out to better characterize this association. The purpose of this study was to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature on COVID-19 infections that led to thrombotic complications necessitating surgical intervention. We hypothesized that patients with recent or active COVID-19 infection would have high rates of thromboembolic complications both arterial and venous in origin.

Aim: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature on COVID-19 infections that led to thrombotic complications necessitating surgical intervention.

Methods: The current systematic review implemented an algorithmic approach to review all the currently available English medical literature on surgical interventions necessitated by COVID-19 thrombotic complications using the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis principles. A comprehensive search of the medical literature in the "PubMed", "Scopus", "Google Scholar" top 100 results, and archives of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery was performed using the key words "COVID-19" AND "surgery" AND "thromboembolism" AND "complication". The search string was generated and the records which were not specific about surgical interventions or thrombotic complications due to COVID-19 infection were excluded. Titles and abstracts were screened by two authors and full-text articles were assessed for eligibility and inclusion. Finally, results were further refined to focus on articles that focused on surgical interventions that were necessitated by COVID-19 thrombotic complications.

Results: The database search resulted in the final inclusion of 22 retrospective studies, after application of the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Of the included studies, 17 were single case reports, 3 were case series and 2 were cross sectional cohort studies. All studies were retrospective in nature. Twelve of the reported studies were conducted in the United States of America, with the remaining studies originating from Italy, Turkey, Pakistan, France, Serbia, and Germany. All cases reported in our study were laboratory confirmed SARS-CoV-2 positive. A total of 70 cases involving surgical intervention were isolated from the 22 studies included in this review.

Conclusion: There is paucity of data describing the relationship between COVID-19 infection and thrombotic complications necessitating the need for surgical intervention. Intestinal ischemia and acute limb ischemia are amongst the most common thrombotic events due to COVID-19 that required operative management. An overall postoperative mortality of 30% was found in those who underwent operative procedures for thrombotic complications, with most deaths occurring in those with bowel ischemia. Physicians should be aware that despite thromboprophylaxis, severe thrombotic complications can still occur in this patient population, however, surgical intervention results in relatively low mortality apart from cases of ischemic bowel resection.

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