key: cord-0809155-aa3ourc6 authors: Ramella, Vittorio; Papa, Giovanni; Bottosso, Stefano; Cazzato, Vito; Arnež, Zoran Marij title: Microsurgical reconstruction in the time of COVID‐19 date: 2020-05-15 journal: Microsurgery DOI: 10.1002/micr.30604 sha: 10a65d1cbb3621bec88b72c62e7348c126305f32 doc_id: 809155 cord_uid: aa3ourc6 nan In March 2020, a 50-year-old woman presented in our Plastic Surgery Clinic, with a 3 × 2.5 cm oral cavity cancer. A CT scan with contrast was performed and confirmed the presence of a lesion involving the floor of the mouth, the symphysis of the mandible and the left neck lymph nodes. It is well known that timely start of surgical treatment is associated with higher survival rates in patients with head and neck cancer (Graboyes et al., 2019) . Based on these premises, Plastic and ENT surgery units agreed to operate the patient on April 1. Before the operation, the patient performed all requested pre-operative screening tests. Testing for COVID-19 was negative. In the OR, during the intubation and extubation, all health staff wore personal protective equipment (PPE). We performed a wide tumor excision, marginal mandibulectomy, bilateral functional lymph node dissection and soft tissue reconstruction with an ALT free flap. In the post-operative period the patient spent the first night in a dedicated intensive care area, she was monitored with Licox PtO 2 system (Arnez, Ramella, Papa, Novati, et al., 2019) . After she was transferred to Plastic surgery unit, where she remained isolated for a further 7 days, until her second Covid-19 testing was found negative. The post-operative period was uneventful and without any complication. In April 2020, an 80-year-old man was admitted to our ER, with a Gustilo IIIA open tibial fracture after fall from high. The patient had metastatic urothelial cancer and was positive for COVID-19. Our orthoplastic protocol (Arnez, Ramella, Papa, Galici, et al., 2019) consists of the first debridement, temporary bone fixation and coverage within 24 hr of trauma, followed by the definitive bone fixation and soft tissue coverage within 7 days after trauma. In this case, the first surgery was technically demanding due to the use of the PPE, impossibility to wear magnification loops and difficult communication between the members of the surgical team. For these reasons and for the patient's comorbidities, we decided on conservative non-microsurgical treatment (debridement, external fixation and direct closure of the wound) to simplify the postoperative management of the Covid-19 positive patient. Microsurgical free flap reconstructions are demanding surgeries that require long OR times and often intensive post-operative care in ICU units. In this period of constrained resources, and necessity of wearing additional protective equipment, microsurgical reconstruction must be performed but only after careful case-by-case assessment because, even during Covid-19 pandemia it is imperative for then health systems to guarantee the patients the best treatment. In borderline cases, when possible, in view of many additional difficulties, we suggest a more conservative approach. The authors declare no conflict of interest and no financial disclosure. The sooner the better? Patients' satisfaction following ortho-plastic treatment of lower limb open fractures within and after one week from injury Is the LICOX ® PtO2 system reliable for monitoring of free flaps? Comparison between two cohorts of patients Association of treatment delays with survival for patients with head and neck Cancer: A systematic review Covid-19: All non-urgent elective surgery is suspended for at least three months in England