key: cord-0945208-rcst6va1 authors: Tamirian, Richard; Klein, Michael; Chui, Patricia; Park, Julia; Frangos, Spiros; Shah, Paresh; Malino, Cris M.K. title: Acute Appendicitis During The COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multicenter, Retrospective Analysis From The US Epicenter date: 2022-05-21 journal: Am Surg DOI: 10.1177/00031348221103649 sha: 863782414170d1243c97b952319f178068d8d2c3 doc_id: 945208 cord_uid: rcst6va1 BACKGROUND: Acute appendicitis (AA) is the most common surgical emergency, with a relatively stable yearly incidence. During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, as New York City (NYC) emerged as the US epicenter, hospitals saw a marked reduction in patients presenting with non-COVID-related diseases. The objective of this study was to characterize the effects of the pandemic on the incidence, presentation, and management of AA. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of patients with AA who presented to two academic medical centers during the NYC COVID peak (March 22nd-May 31st, 2020) was performed. This group was compared to a control cohort presenting during the same period in 2019. Primary outcomes included the incidence of AA, complicated disease, and management. Secondary outcomes included duration of symptoms, hospital length of stay, and complication rates. Statistical analyses were performed using Mann-Whitney U, Chi-square, and Fisher’s exact tests. RESULTS: A 49.1% reduction in the incidence of AA was seen between 2019 (n = 114) and 2020 (n = 58). Median duration of symptoms doubled from 1 day in 2019 to 2 days in 2020 (P < .02). Proportionally, the incidence of complicated appendicitis rose from 19.3% to 41.4% (P < .005). 32.4% of patients with uncomplicated AA underwent non-operative management in 2020, compared to 12% in 2019 (P < .02). Hospital length of stay and complication rates were similar between years. DISCUSSION: Significantly fewer AA patients presented during the initial phase of the pandemic. Patients presented later, which may have contributed to a higher proportion of complicated disease. Surgeons were also more likely to treat uncomplicated AA nonoperatively than they were prior. Further research is needed to understand the long-term consequences of these changes. The World Health Organization declared Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) a worldwide pandemic on March 11th, 2020. On March 22nd, as New York City (NYC) emerged as the epicenter of disease outbreak in the United States and a first wave of COVID-19 patients flooded its many hospitals, New York State issued a "New York State on Pause" executive order, closing all nonessential businesses, banning social gathering, and ordering residents to shelter in place. To conserve resources for the expected large influx of COVID-19 patients, hospitals around the city also postponed or canceled elective procedures. 1 Health systems across the city also began to see a marked reduction in patients presenting with non-COVID-related urgent and emergent conditions such as acute coronary syndrome, stroke, and acute abdomen. [2] [3] [4] Acute appendicitis (AA) is the most common surgical emergency worldwide, and appendectomy is the gold standard treatment for acute, uncomplicated disease. 5 A study of surgeries performed in Taiwan during the SARS-CoV-1 outbreak in 2003 identified appendectomy as the procedure with the lowest demand elasticity, with the number of appendectomies performed being generally insulated from societal and pandemic-related changes. 6 Given the expected steady incidence of AA, surgeons in NYC expected continued influx of this common surgical disease. However, despite these expectations, the number of patients presenting with AA in New York City declined dramatically. Hospitals nationwide saw a 42% decrease in emergency department (ED) visits in March and April 2020, with the largest decline in visits for complaints of abdominal pain. 4 Multiple recent studies have shown declines in patients presenting with AA, delays in patients seeking treatment, and a marked decrease in appendectomies performed worldwide during the COVID-19 pandemic. [7] [8] [9] [10] The objective of this study is to characterize the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the incidence, presentation, complications, and management of AA in two large, academic hospitals in New York City. NYU Tisch Hospital, part of NYU Langone Health, is a private, nonprofit, 1100-bed teaching hospital. New York City Health + Hospitals/Bellevue is the flagship of the largest municipal hospital system in the United States, and is a public, 1500-bed teaching, safety-net hospital and Level I trauma center. Surgical staff at both hospitals followed administrative guidance throughout the pandemic to continue emergency surgery as necessary. 1 In comparison to 2019, we hypothesize there was a significant decrease in the incidence of acute appendicitis and an increase in the proportion of patients presenting with perforation or more complicated disease. This retrospective cohort study was approved by the NYU Grossman School of Medicine Institutional Review Board and the Bellevue Research Review Committee. All eligible patients were identified using the electronic medical record reports of general surgery consults billed and by using International Classification of Disease 10 (ICD-10) codes. Patients 18 years or older with a diagnosis of AA, who presented between March 22nd and May 31st, 2020 comprised the pandemic cohort. A control cohort consisted of patients with AA presenting during the same period in 2019. The primary outcomes were the differences in the incidence of AA, incidence of complicated and uncomplicated disease, and operative and non-operative management between the cohorts. Complicated appendicitis was defined as AA with radiographic or intraoperative findings consistent with abscess, phlegmon, or perforation. Secondary outcomes included duration of symptoms prior to presentation, patient referral patterns (eg, referred from urgent care, primary care, etc.), hospital length of stay (HLOS), 30-day complication rates, and rates of recurrence. Additional variables including demographics and medical comorbidities were also collected. Statistical analysis was performed using R Studio software (RStudio, Boston, MA). Descriptive statistics were performed for all continuous variables and are reported as mean and standard deviation or median. Continuous variables were compared using Student's t-test or the Mann-Whitney U test. Categorical variables were compared using Fisher's exact test or the chi-square test. Significance was set at P < .05. Overall Incidence 172 patients were diagnosed with AA during the study period. 58 patients presented with AA during the pandemic period compared to 114 patients during the same period in 2019. This represented a 49.1% reduction. Patient demographic information and medical comorbidities are listed in Table 1 . There was no significant difference between the pandemic and control cohorts with regard to age, sex, race, or ethnicity. Five patients (8.6%) in 2020 had a positive COVID-19 PCR test. No patient tested positive for COVID-19 in the 30 days following their initial admission. The median duration of symptoms prior to presentation in 2020 was 2 days, compared to 1 day in 2019 (P = .0117). Twenty-one patients (36.2%) in the pandemic cohort presented greater than 48 hours after the initial onset of symptoms, whereas 18 patients (15.8%) presented after that amount of time in 2019 (P = .0018). Patients referred from an outside hospital, urgent care, or other provider comprised 24.1% of the pandemic cohort and 36.8% of the control cohort, though this was not significant (P = .0928) ( Table 1) . There was an increase in the proportion of patients presenting with complicated appendicitis during the pandemic. Twenty-four patients (41.4%) of the pandemic cohort were diagnosed with complicated disease, compared to 22 patients (19.3%) in 2019 (P = .0036) ( Figure 1 ). Thirteen patients (22.4%) in 2020 and 10 patients (8.8%) in 2019 were found to have either radiographic evidence or intra-operative findings of an intra-abdominal abscess (P = .0177). Analysis of surgical specimens of 3 patients in the pandemic cohort and 2 patients in the control cohort revealed pathology consistent with appendiceal neoplasm (P = .3324) ( Table 2) . Patients presenting in 2020 with a diagnosis of complicated appendicitis had a longer median duration of symptoms than those with uncomplicated disease (3 days vs 1 day, P = .0180) ( Table 3) . There was an increase in the proportion of patients managed non-operatively in the pandemic cohort. Twenty-three patients (39.7%) underwent non-operative management (NOM) during the pandemic compared to 22 patients (19.3%) in 2019 (P = .0072) ( Table 2) . This difference was largely driven by an increase in the nonoperative management of patients with uncomplicated AA. Of the 34 patients with uncomplicated AA in 2020, 11 (32.4%) underwent NOM. This represents a proportional increase from 2019 where 11 of 92 patients (12.0%) with uncomplicated disease underwent NOM (P = .0158). There were no significant differences in the management of complicated AA between cohorts ( Figure 1 ). Five patients otherwise meeting eligibility for appendectomy were deferred due to COVID-19 pandemicrelated restrictions, as documented in the medical record. Three of these patients had a positive COVID-19 PCR test. Additionally, one asymptomatic patient who was found to be COVID positive underwent laparoscopic appendectomy. Hospital length of stay was similar for both cohorts at 30 hours in 2020 and 32 hours in 2019 (P = .2798) ( Table 2 ). Patients managed non-operatively in 2020 had a longer median HLOS than those managed surgically, though this difference was not significant (48 hours vs 30 hours, P = .9864). For patients with complicated AA, median HLOS was significantly shorter in the pandemic cohort at 48 hours than in the control cohort at 84 hours (P = .0298). There was no significant difference in HLOS for uncomplicated appendicitis between 2019 and 2020. There was no significant difference in 30-day complication rates between the pandemic and control cohorts. Eight patients (13.8%) in 2020 and eight patients (7.0%) in 2019 experienced at least 1 complication within 30 days of their initial presentation. Ileus was more common in the pandemic cohort, complicating 4 cases (6.9%) compared to 1 case in 2019 (P = .0448). Three (13.0%) of the 23 patients managed non-operatively in 2020 presented with recurrence of appendicitis within 6 months of their initial episode. Similarly, 3 of the 22 patients (13.6%) managed non-operatively in 2019 presented with recurrence ( Table 2) . For patients presenting with uncomplicated appendicitis, there were no significant differences in HLOS, 30day complication rates, or recurrence rates between those managed operatively or non-operatively. Compared with patients managed operatively in 2020, the 5 patients whose operations were deferred due to COVID-19 infection or pandemic restrictions had similar HLOS and 30-day complication rates. One patient presented with recurrence within 6 months requiring operation. Three other patients underwent interval appendectomy within 6 months. 44 patients presented with AA to NYU Tisch Hospital, a private hospital, during the pandemic period. Fourteen patients presented to New York City Health + Hospitals/ Bellevue, a public hospital. It is important to note that these two institutions are staffed by surgeons, all of whom hold faculty positions at NYU Langone Health. These surgeons followed the same evolving administrative and surgical guidelines during the pandemic period. For the pandemic cohort, the median HLOS of 27 hours at NYU Tisch was significantly shorter than the median HLOS of 48 hours at Bellevue (P = .0243). When examining each institution alone, the median HLOS at NYU Tisch decreased from 32 hours in 2019 to 27 hours in 2020 (P = .0378). In contrast, HLOS at Bellevue increased from 32 hours in 2019 to 48 hours in 2020, though this difference was not significant (P = .2006) ( Table 4) . There was no significant difference in severity of disease, management, or complication rates between the two institutions in 2019 or 2020. However, each institution saw an increase in the proportion of patients presenting with complicated appendicitis during the pandemic. This was a statistically significant increase at Bellevue (12.0% vs 50.0%, P = .0190), but was not at NYU Tisch Hospital (21.3% vs 38.6%, P = .0560) ( Table 4 ). In 2020, the majority of patients (69%) identifying as Black or Hispanic sought care for their AA at Bellevue, whereas all patients identifying as White presented to NYU Tisch (P < .0001). Additionally, 32.7% of White patients compared to only 6.3% of Black or Hispanic patients were referred to the emergency department from another facility such as an urgent care or primary care physician, though this difference was not significant (P = .0670). Forty-four percent of Black or Hispanic patients had evidence of complicated disease compared to 28.6% of White patients. However, this difference was also not significant (P = .4894). Three Black or Hispanic patients (18.8%) underwent drainage of an appendiceal abscess by interventional radiology (IR), whereas no White patients required drainage (P = .0420). Hospital length of stay was also significantly longer for patients identifying as Black or Hispanic at 2 days compared to 1 day for patients identifying as White. These differences were not present in 2019. The COVID-19 pandemic changed the landscape of healthcare across New York City, with health systems seeing marked reductions in patients with non-COVIDrelated urgent and emergent conditions. 2,3 Our results are consistent with this phenomenon, showing a 49.1% decrease in the incidence of AA across our two institutions. This is in direct contrast to findings by Tsao et al which purported AA during the first SARS outbreak in 2003 as the condition with the lowest demand elasticity for treatment. This decrease in patients with AA presenting to our emergency departments in 2020 echoes observations from around the world showing similarly striking declines. [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] We hypothesize that this decrease in incidence represents the effects of patients' fears of the emergency room, self-treatment, temporary emigration from NYC, and changes in the movement of individuals due to shelter-in-place orders. In the weeks after the shelter-in-place orders were given, public service announcements took to the air, urging patients to seek timely management of their urgent conditions, as reports of patients delaying care emerged. [13] [14] [15] Our study supports the need for this type of outreach, as patients clearly delayed presentation by approximately 1 day. This delay may be explained by patients' fears of emergency departments, decreased access to healthcare due to pandemic restrictions, lack of transportation, or another factor yet to be established. With urban emigration during the surge, an increase in AA at suburban and rural hospitals was expected but has yet to be noted in the literature. 16 Regardless of their cause, delays in presentation of AA pose the threat of increased frequency of perforation, increased morbidity, and increased mortality. 17, 18 Our findings demonstrate a proportional increase of 22.1% in the incidence of complicated appendicitis during the pandemic. These results corroborate those of other studies in the US and around the world showing increases in rates of perforation and complicated disease during the pandemic. 9,19-21 Fortunately, no differences in the 30-day complication rates of either period were noted. However, perforation itself represents a significant complication: it may preclude early definitive management, prolong hospitalizations, and perhaps miss significant pathology, such as malignancy. Our findings contrast those of Neufeld et al which showed a decrease in presentations of uncomplicated AA, without a significant change in the presentation of complicated AA. The authors suggest their findings may be due to spontaneous resolution of AA without treatment. While we acknowledge this possibility, a reliable method of predicting which patients will resolve without treatment and who will progress to perforation, sepsis, or death remains elusive. Among our most significant findings, the management of patients during the pandemic changed significantly. This is consistent with multiple other studies showing a decrease in appendectomies performed worldwide. 7, 9, 22 This decrease may represent changes in hospital policies to conserve resources and limit exposure, patient or surgeon preferences, or our limited understanding of the risks of anesthesia and surgery in COVID patients at that time. Notably, none of our patients at either hospital developed COVID-19 within 30 days of admission. Our study also shows that this change in management did not result in subsequent increases in complication rates or hospital lengths of stay. These significant findings may help inform the management of AA in this and future pandemics when resources and personnel are strained. To our knowledge, this is the first study to compare presentations and management of AA between private and public institutions within the same municipality. This comparison allowed us to highlight differences between the populations served by these two institutions. It has been established that individuals identifying as Black, Hispanic, and other historically marginalized populations were disproportionately affected by COVID-19. 23, 24 Our results provide some evidence that this disparity extended beyond increased rates and severity of COVID infections. The differences in referral patterns to our emergency departments between Black or Hispanic and White patients may suggest differences in access to care, especially during pandemic conditions. Nonetheless, it highlights the role of the public institution as the primary source of care for many of these patients. Though we did not detect a significant difference between rates of complicated AA between these populations, longer hospital lengths of stay and increased referrals for IR drainage may suggest more severe disease in the Black or Hispanic populations. Further multi-institutional research is warranted to assess the widespread effects of COVID-19 on these and other minority groups, and the reasons for these differences. There are several limitations of our study. We used billing records of general surgery consults and ICD-10 codes to identify patients within each cohort. It is possible some patients presenting with AA were not identified by these methods. Though the surgeons that comprise the faculty of the two represented hospitals are all faculty at the same institution, there was no universal management guideline for uncomplicated appendicitis, nor complicated appendicitis. Therefore, there may have been undetected differences in the severity of disease or presentation for those who were managed surgically. Additionally, we also chose to record complications within 30 days of the patients' presentations. This may have excluded late occurring complications. Complication rates may also be underestimated during the pandemic period if patients are delaying or not seeking care due to the pandemic. In conclusion, this study demonstrated a decrease in the incidence of acute appendicitis after the institution of the "New York State on PAUSE" executive order. Significant delays in presentation and increases in complicated disease represent both threats to patient health, as well as challenges that health systems must overcome in this and future infectious disease outbreaks. Additional research on the long-term effects of changes in management during the pandemic is needed. Further studies of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the presentation of other urgent and emergent surgical conditions are also warranted. .3850 hr = Hours; † P = .0190, ‡ P = .0075, Ã P = .0378. 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R.T., M.K., and C.M. contributed to the data acquisition and analysis, and prepared the manuscript. M.K., P.C., J.P., S.F., P.S. and C.M. provided expertise that influenced the study design and data interpretation. All authors have drafted or critically revised the manuscript and give final approval for this version to be published. The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The data that support the findings of this study are available from the NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Restrictions apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license for this study. Data are available from the authors with the permission of the NYU Grossman School of Medicine.