Elective hernia surgery cancellation due to the COVID-19 pandemic
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LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Elective hernia surgery cancellation due to the COVID‑19 pandemic F. Köckerling1 · D. Köckerling2 · Ch. Schug‑Pass1 Received: 13 July 2020 / Accepted: 23 July 2020 © Springer-Verlag France SAS, part of Springer Nature 2020
Dear Editor, The novel disease COVID-19 caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was declared a pandemic by the World Health Organisation on the 11th March 2020 [1]. With exponential increase in case numbers, 770,000 persons globally were infected by SARSCoV-2 at the end of March 2020 [1]. It was thought that approximately 10% of COVID-19 patients progress to severe disease requiring admission to hospital and, if necessary, to critical care units [1]. Consequently, healthcare providers around the world prepared for the overwhelming influx of critically ill patients, leading many governments and international surgical associations to demand the temporary discontinuation of elective surgical interventions [2]. It is estimated that 28 million elective operations were cancelled during the peak 12 weeks of disruption caused by COVID-19, equalling 72.3% of all elective surgery [3]. In February to June 2019, the hernia registry Herniamed documented up to 7000 inguinal hernia, 1700 umbilical hernia and 1200 incisional hernia repairs per month (Figs. 1, 2, 3). Of those, the proportion of emergency repairs was 2.5% for inguinal hernias and 5.9% for both umbilical and incisional hernias.
Following the mid-March announcement by the German government to halt elective surgical interventions, the number of hernia repairs registered by Herniamed during March 2020 had already decreased considerably (Figs. 1, 2, 3). The lowest case load was documented in April 2020, during which the number of hernia repairs was equivalent to around 25% of those performed in February to June 2019. These numbers were validated by billing data from health insurance companies [4]. Interestingly, the number of emergency hernia repairs did not increase as expected, but rather showed a trend towards decreasing (Figs. 1, 2, 3), which was confirmed by other analyses [5]. With SARS-CoV-2 infections decreasing during May 2020, the restrictions imposed on elective surgery in German hospitals were lifted, resulting in a rebound in the number of elective hernia repairs (Figs. 1, 2, 3). However, despite normalisation of hospital policies in Germany, the case load of hernia repairs in June 2020 was still significantly lower compared to June 2019. These data from the Herniamed registry confirm that more than 70% of all elective hernia repairs were not performed during the peak weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to no overall increase in the rate of emergency repairs, contrary to expectations.
* F. Köckerling [email protected] 1
Department of Surgery and Centre for Minimally Invasive Surgery, Academic Teaching Hospital of Charité Medical School, Vivantes Hospital, Neue Bergstrasse 6, 13585 Berlin, Germany
Medical Sciences Division, University of Oxford, Oxford,
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