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Surgical activity during the Covid-19 pandemic: Results for 112 patients in a French tertiary care center, a quality improvement study

Pierre Philouze, Marion Cortet, Diego Quattrone, Philippe Céruse, Frédéric Aubrun, Gil Dubernard, Jean‐Yves Mabrut, Marie‐Charlotte Delignette, Kayvan Mohkam

2020International Journal of Surgery24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: After the emergence of Covid-19 in China, Hubei Province, the epidemic quickly spread to Europe. France was quickly hit and our institution was one of the first French university to receive patients infected with Sars-COV2. The predicted massive influx of patients motivated the cancellation of all elective surgical procedures planned to free hospitalization beds and to free intensive care beds. Nevertheless, we should properly select patients who will be canceled to avoid life-threatening. The retained surgical indications are surgical emergencies, oncologic surgery, and organ transplantation. MATERIAL AND METHODS: We describe the organization of our institution which allows the continuation of these surgical activities while limiting the exposure of our patients to the Sars Cov2. RESULTS: After 4 weeks of implementation of intra-hospital protocols for the control of the Covid-19 epidemic, 112 patients were operated on (104 oncology or emergency surgeries and 8 liver transplants). Only one case of post-operative contamination was observed. No mortality related to Covid-19 was noted. No cases of contamination of surgical care personnel have been reported. CONCLUSION: We found that the performance of oncological or emergency surgery is possible, safe for both patients and caregivers.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePandemicTertiary careCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)LimitingGeneral surgerySevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Emergency medicineMedical emergencySurgeryInternal medicineMechanical engineeringInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseEngineeringCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsInfection Control and VentilationCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies