key: cord-0835633-tfrlgvgh authors: Wilkie, Mark D.; Gaskell, Peter; Hall, Benjamin; Jones, Terence M.; Kinshuck, Andrew J. title: Emergency presentations of head and neck cancer: Our experience in the wake of the COVID‐19 pandemic date: 2021-06-17 journal: Clin Otolaryngol DOI: 10.1111/coa.13821 sha: da904a236bcf1da5f296874e71730dfa03c90a09 doc_id: 835633 cord_uid: tfrlgvgh The COVID-19 pandemic imposed dramatic changes on delivery of medical services, leading to significant reductions in urgent referrals for suspected cancer. A resultant surge in patients presenting with advanced disease, potentially in an emergency context, has been anticipated but, until now, no real-world data have been disseminated. Herein, we report a dramatic surge in new and newly recurrent HNCs presenting with advanced disease in an emergency context in the period immediately following the COVID-19-induced UK national lockdown. To minimise adverse outcomes HNC services should prepare for a fluctuant but ongoing increase in such presentations, with expansion and streamlining of secondary healthcare capacity, together with accurate public health messaging tailored towards patients and primary care. These data are likely to have lasting significance and will help inform practice and healthcare policy during and following any future COVID-19 outbreaks. This imposed dramatic changes on delivery of medical services, with a decrease in, or cessation of, most non-COVID-19 NHS services, leading to significant concern regarding collateral effects on other patient groups requiring time-critical access to health care. With respect to cancer services, referrals via the 2-week-wait urgent pathway for suspected cancer in England are reported to have decreased by up to 84% during the initial lockdown period, 1 with only partial recovery following lockdown-easing. 2 Indeed, Cancer Research UK has estimated that approximately 2300 cancer cases were likely to have gone undiagnosed every week across the UK during the initial lockdown period, 3 and data published in June 2020 indicated approximately 10 000 "missing" cancer referrals in April 2020 alone. 4 Such figures have clear implications for delays in diagnosis and treatment, and, by association, an anticipated surge in patients presenting with advanced disease, potentially in an emergency context. Indeed, numerous studies have suggested this and have modelled lives and life-years lost predicated on these anticipated delays. 1,2,5 As yet, however, no real-world data have been published on the impact of these delays on cancer presentation patterns. Specific to head and neck cancer (HNC), significant delays have the propensity to result in patients presenting in an emergency context, typically with issues relating to airway compromise, dysphagia and associated malnutrition, and less commonly exsanguination. Largely this reflects sacrosanct and complex locoregional anatomy but is compounded by the fact that HNCs typically have a short tumour volume doubling time. 6 The principal aim of this study was to examine whether the COVID-19 pandemic has had a tangible impact on the rates of newly diagnosed HNC, or newly diagnosed recurrent HNC, presenting in an emergency context. This study was undertaken in accordance with our institution's Clinical Information and Audit Department regulations and approval. All patient data were kept anonymous and encrypted throughout. All patients that were admitted to our department in an emergency capacity related to a new, or newly recurrent, diagnosis of HNC over a six-month period following the initial UK nationwide lockdown (June-November 2020 inclusive) were identified prospectively. This included both patients that presented directly to our hospital and those that initially presented to a peripheral referring hospital (within the referral catchment of our regional head and neck multi-disciplinary team [MDT]) and were then transferred to our department for ongoing management. All such patients presenting over the same time period in the previous three years (2017-2019 inclusive) were identified retrospectively from electronic emergency handover records. Patients presenting as emergencies but with an existing diagnosis of HNC were excluded. Relevant clinical data including demographics, presenting features, underlying diagnosis and subsequent treatment details were extracted from electronic hospital records. The total numbers of patients diagnosed with a new, or newly recurrent, HNC through any route, and under the care of our department, over the same time periods were also extracted from our HNC and thyroid MDT meeting databases to ascertain the proportion of emergency HNC presentations. In June-November 2020, a total of 29 patients were eligible for inclusion, of whom 21 and 8 were diagnosed with a new or newly recurrent HNC, respectively, comprising respective proportions of 12.3% (21/171), 19.5% (8/41) and 13.7% (29/212) for new HNCs alone, newly recurrent HNCs alone, and new and newly recurrent HNCs combined diagnosed through any route. These represent significant increases in proportions presenting as emergencies in any of the previous three years (P < .001, P = .018 and P < .001 for new HNCs, newly recurrent HNCs and combined HNCs, respectively), as detailed in Table 1 . Patient demographics, presenting symptoms and tumour characteristics are summarised for the study cohort as a whole and by year of presentation in Table 2 , while acute inpatient treatment details and oncological treatment intent are presented in Table 3 . Notably, 91.9% (57/62) presented with advanced (T3/T4) primary disease, 41.9% (26/62) went onto receive treatment with palliative intent and 16.1% (10/62) died during admission. The principal findings of this study demonstrate emphatically a surge in HNCs presenting in an emergency context, in conjunction with a modest reduction in presentations through other diagnostic pathways, in the period following the initial UK national lockdown. This not only has important and obvious consequences for patient experience and provision of resources but also has significant implications for patient outcomes. Evidence from several countries demonstrates that these patient groups experience poorer clinical outcomes compared with patients diagnosed through other routes, 7 and the fact that this metric is audited on a national level in England 8 attests to this notion. It seems intuitive to suggest that the reason for this is that emergency presentation is simply a surrogate of advanced disease presentation. However, a previous study examining emergency HNC presentations prior to the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated that whilst those patients presenting in an emergency context did so exclusively with advanced disease, survival outcomes were considerably less favourable than those for patients with similarly staged disease who presented through other pathways, 9 suggesting other factors are also at play. Nevertheless, this only emphasises the importance of channelling efforts to reduce such presentations. Although, to the best of our knowledge, this represents the first study to specifically examine the impact of COVID-19 on real-world cancer presentation patterns, our findings align with numerous modelling studies reporting an anticipated surge in emergency and advanced disease presentation. Moreover, in such modelling studies several HNC subsites have been identified as cancers that are particularly susceptible to these delays in terms of clinically significant lives and life-years lost, 1 broadly consistent with the inference presented here insofar as the observed surge in COVID-induced HNC emergency presentations has been associated with remarkably poor patient outcomes. We recognise that interpretation of the data presented here are limited primarily by the observational nature of the study, with no definitive cause-effect relationship demonstrated. Notwithstanding, and as alluded to above, this study is unique insofar as it represents the first study to date to report on changes to cancer presentation patterns in the wake of the pandemic. Moreover, the magnitude of the increase observed in HNC emergency presentations immediately following the COVID-19-related UK nationwide lockdown is compelling and is highly unlikely to be attributable to random clustering alone. Indeed, we suggest the observed surge is likely to reflect significant delays in presentation brought about by COVID-19-induced re-purposing of healthcare services, compounded by increased patient anxiety and associated changes in health-seeking behaviours. Furthermore, even following lockdown-easing the shift from face-to-face to remote consultations, both in primary and secondary care, may have presented further barriers to patients accessing • The COVID-19 pandemic imposed dramatic changes on delivery of medical services, leading to significant reductions in urgent referrals for suspected cancer. • A resultant surge in patients presenting with advanced disease, potentially in an emergency context, has been anticipated but, until now, no real-world data have been disseminated. • Herein, we report a dramatic surge in new and newly recurrent HNCs presenting with advanced disease in an emergency context in the period immediately following the COVID-19-induced UK national lockdown. • To minimise adverse outcomes HNC services should prepare for a fluctuant but ongoing increase in such presentations, with expansion and streamlining of secondary healthcare capacity, together with accurate public health messaging tailored towards patients and primary care. • These data are likely to have lasting significance and will help inform practice and healthcare policy during and following any future COVID-19 outbreaks. appropriate healthcare services in a timely fashion. Although speculative, this is supported by repeated and consistent anecdotal patient accounts. A further limitation of this study relates to external validity. The reported changes to HNC presentation patterns are specific to the Cheshire and Merseyside region, which may not extrapolate elsewhere within the UK, or internationally. Indeed, substantial geographical variation has been noted in rates of patient deferment in accessing urgent referral for cancer symptoms, 1,5 which in turn is likely to influence directly any subsequent change in cancer presentation patterns. Future studies investigating such presentation patterns on a national macrodata level will provide interesting insights in this regard. In an era of unprecedented demand placed on healthcare services by the COVID-19 pandemic, it is of significant clinical relevance to examine the fallout from this in terms of cancer presentation patterns, given that any disruption is likely to be particularly detrimental to outbreaks. None to declare. MDW contributed to conceptualisation, methodology, data collection, formal analysis, writing-original draft and writing-review and editing; PG contributed to methodology, data collection and writing-review and editing; BH contributed to data collection and writing-review and editing; TMJ contributed to writing-review and editing, formal analysis and supervision; AJK-conceptualisation, writing-review and editing and supervision. The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request. Dysphagia & malnutrition-3 (27.3) Bleeding into UADT-1 (9.1) Bleeding from neck mass-2 (18.2) Dysphagia & malnutrition-1 (11.1) Bleeding into UADT-1 (11.1) Bleeding from neck mass-1 (11.1) Advanced primary disease refers to T3 or T4 classification. Abbreviation: UADT, upper aerodigestive tract Effect of delays in the 2-week-wait cancer referral pathway during the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer survival in the UK: a modelling study Estimated impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer services and excess 1-year mortality in people with cancer and multimorbidity: near real-time data on cancer care, cancer deaths and a population-based cohort study How coronavirus is impacting cancer services in the UK 2020 Provider-based cancer waiting times for The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer deaths due to delays in diagnosis in England, UK: a national, population-based, modelling study Tumor progression in waiting time for radiotherapy in head and neck cancer Population trends in emergency cancer diagnoses: the role of changing patient case-mix Emergency presentations of cancer: quarterly data 2020 Emergency presentations of head and neck cancer: a modern perspective First interim report from the ENT UK INTEGRATE Head and neck cancer telephone triage service evaluation 2020. https:// www.entuk.org/first -inter im-repor t-ent-uk-integ rate-head-andneck-cance r-telep hone-triag e-servi ce-evalu ation How to cite this article Each year represents the six-month period of June-November inclusive. a Those patients that died during acute hospital admission were excluded from length of stay data analysis. TA B L E 3 Acute inpatient and oncological treatment details for the study cohort as a whole and by year of presentation