Abstract

Abstract Background Patients waiting for elective cholecystectomy for symptomatic gallstone disease may need admission with biliary symptoms or complications whilst on the waiting list. The longer the length from listing to procedure the higher the risk of symptoms and possible admission with complications. Many elective operations were cancelled or delayed during the pandemic leading to increased waiting times. The trust noticed a significant number of patients presenting to hospital who were already listed for surgery. This study looks at emergency admission data of 100 patients awaiting elective cholecystectomy. Methods Hospital admission data on 100 successive patients from the cholecystectomy waiting list were analysed from Dec 2021-January 2022. Data was collected on when were they added to the list and whether they had presented to hospital in the waiting period before cholecystectomy. Of those that were admitted, reasons for admission, demographics of people who needed admission and length of stay in hospital were recorded. Results Of the 100 patients many had been waiting more than a year with Covid 19 a predominant delaying factor (cholecystectomy is a P3 or P4 procedure and many elective procedures were cancelled or delayed during the pandemic). This cohort of patients had 32 separate presentations to hospital while on the waiting list (some patients presenting multiple times). 9 patients required emergency hospital admission for clinical reasons such as pancreatitis and cholecystitis. This totaled 67 bed days for the admitting hospital, some data was unavailable due to admissions to other hospitals. Conclusions NICE guidelines recommend laparoscopic cholecystectomy within 1 week for patients presenting with acute gallstone disease. Early elective cholecystectomy is recommended for patients with symptomatic gallstones. Delays in elective cholecystectomy operations during Covid 19 have caused delays to definitive treatment and led to excess bed usage during the treatment pathway with the associated financial costs and patient morbidity.

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