Abstract

Objectives:The major shift in health-care resource utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic to support patients requiring mechanical ventilation and intensive care monitoring has led to unprecedented cancellations of elective surgeries and reductions of ambulatory clinic visits worldwide. The primary objective of this study is to determine whether the response to the pandemic resulted in modifications, cancellations or delays to the standard therapeutic algorithms for patients with gynecologic malignancies at tertiary, large-volume publicly funded Canadian cancer centers as compared to a privately funded American cancer center.Methods:This is a retrospective cohort study of all surgical oncology and gynecologic oncology cases performed in the province of Ontario and at the University Health Network/Princess Margaret Cancer Center (UHN/PMH) as a surrogate for treatment delays, compared to all gynecologic oncology patients treated at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA, USA, between March 3, 2020-June 30, 2020. Descriptive statistics and treatment times were analysed using SPSS 25.0Results:In the province of Ontario, between March 15, 2020-October 25, 2020, there was a 19% overall decrease in surgical oncology volumes compared to the same time period the previous year (March 17, 2019-Oct 17, 2019). There was an increase of 96% in high priority surgical oncology cases and a 43% decrease in low priority cancer cases. Surgeries for gynecologic malignancies decreased by 8% in the province of Ontario as compared to the previous year. At UHN/PMH, a publicly funded tertiary cancer center in Ontario, there was a 59.8% reduction in surgical oncology volumes between March 09, 2020-May 04 2020, as compared to the previous year (March 04, 2019-April 29 2019). In comparison, at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, a privately funded tertiary cancer center, there were 202 new gynecologic oncology patient referrals and 66 returning patients between March 3, 2020-June 30, 2020. The median time from referral to first consultation for new patients was 11 days (range 1-21) and the time to primary treatment was 31 days (range 5-157). New patients with ovarian malignancies had the shortest time to treatment of 22 days (range 5-157). There were no modifications made to the standard of care treatment plans for any patients and 5.7% of the patients had treatment delays.Conclusions:During the COVID-19 pandemic, the public Canadian healthcare system in the province of Ontario was subjected to a 19% reduction in surgical oncology volumes and 8% specifically for gynecologic oncology surgeries, while there was a 5.7% treatment delay for gynecologic oncology surgeries for a similar patient cohort treated at a tertiary cancer center in a privately funded health care system in the United States.

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