key: cord-1033239-0z2xwrty authors: Gallo, Oreste; Locatello, Luca Giovanni; Orlando, Pietro; Martelli, Federica; Bruno, Chiara; Cilona, Maria; Fancello, Giuseppe; Mani, Riccardo; Vitali, Daniele; Bianco, Giacomo; Trovati, Massimo; Tomaiuolo, Matteo; Maggiore, Giandomenico title: The clinical consequences of the COVID‐19 lockdown: A report from an Italian referral ENT department date: 2020-08-26 journal: Laryngoscope Investig Otolaryngol DOI: 10.1002/lio2.446 sha: 045475e184b1fb1293eb0b6b005809e35434b6d1 doc_id: 1033239 cord_uid: 0z2xwrty OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the clinical effects of health care reorganization because of COVID‐19, in a non‐red zone Italian referral department of Otorhinolaryngology. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the statistics of admissions to the Emergency Department (ED) of the Careggi University Hospital, Florence, from January 1, 2020, to May 17, 2020. Data regarding elective and urgent head and neck disorders were reviewed and the most challenging cases were discussed. RESULTS: During the lockdown period, outpatient otolaryngological consultations and elective procedures decreased by 78% and 75% respectively, while emergency/urgency surgery increased by 128%. The five most emblematic clinical cases were thoroughly analyzed. CONCLUSION: Our analysis shows how the profound rearrangement of clinical and surgical activities, along with the citizens' fear to seek medical care has probably exacerbated the management of many routine head and neck conditions. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4. protective equipment (PPE) are contributing to its rapid diffusion across the world. 6, 7 Nosocomial setting certainly played an important role in SARS-CoV-2 spreading: in the period coming from 1 to 20 May, 56.7% of the new Italian COVID-19 confirmed cases were attributable to inhospital/health care facilities transmission. 8 As of May 20, 2020, 11 .7% of all Italian cases are constituted by health care workers (HCW) themselves, a percentage that is growing week by week. 8 In addition, due to this incredibly rapid contagiousness, many national health care systems have been literally overwhelmed, with the dreadful risk of disregarding many "non-COVID-19" disorders. 9 In this scenario and under the principles of "social distancing" and of "selfisolation," the clinical activities of many departments were drastically reduced, elective surgical procedures were postponed and a large proportion of outpatient consultations were canceled or are being moved to telemedicine. 10 The fear of contracting the virus and/or of not receiving proper hospital care was associated with many deleterious medical and social consequences and some authors have wittily spoken of "covidlateral" damages of the pandemic. 11 As an example, it was recently estimated that even modest delays in oncological surgery can negatively affect survival. 12, 13 Many excellent guidelines and frameworks have been recently published as a reference guide to reorganize the practice of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery but, as we are coming out of the acute phase of the pandemic, it is now time to take stock of its clinical consequences. 14, 15 The aim of the present article is to analyze the direct and indirect effects of COVID-19 on the clinical activity of our Department in a third referral Italian hospital. Lastly, we describe some emblematic cases of patients who had a delay in accessing the Emergency Department (ED) or even denied to undergo surgery because of fear of infection with unfavorable yet preventable outcomes. We retrospectively reviewed the official statistical data of all patients admitted to the ED of Careggi University Hospital, Florence, Italy from January 1, 2020, to May 17, 2020. It is a third-level referral hospital and hub trauma center for the central Italy where logistics, clinical, and surgical activity were profoundly reorganized and a distinct pathway of care for COVID-19 confirmed cases was established since the beginning of the pandemic: the interested reader is referred to another publication for a detailed description of these changes. 16 We separately retrieved and analyzed COVID-19-related accesses (defined as any patient presenting with fever, cough, sore throat, respiratory failure, or new-onset smell/taste disorder) from non-COVID-19 accesses. Secondly, we extracted prelockdown accesses (January 1, 2020-March 8, 2020, weeks 1-10) from those since the introduction of nationwide distancing measures by our Government to present (March 9, 2020-May 17, 2020, weeks [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] . 17 Then, we retrospectively reviewed all the outpatient and inpatient activity of the Department of Otorhinolaryngology during the same periods and performed the same comparisons. In detail, as per the directives of the Italian Ministry of Health and the institutional guidelines, the following modifications have been implemented since the beginning of the lockdown period: • Every patient is obliged to obtain a SARS-CoV-2 nasopharyngeal swab about 24 hours before being hospitalized (note that the kit used in our hospital for a SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR has a turnaround time of approximately 6 hours); • Operating rooms are reserved only for nondeferrable surgery (see below); • Multidisciplinary cancer team consultations are conducted by teleconference meetings; • Routine in-office consultations are maintained or postponed on the basis of a telephone triage: all consultations for non-acute and non-complicated benign/functional disorders and for neoplastic disorders with a negative follow-up >5 years, and without new/ worsening symptoms or suspicious findings reported on the most recent imaging examination are postponed; • HCW are requested to constantly wear PPE (gloves, mask, face shield, and gown) while at work, and regardless of the virological status of the patient; • All waiting rooms have been provided with an alcohol-based sanitizer dispenser, and available seats are kept two meters away from one another; • On arrival, body temperature is checked, a surgical face mask must be worn at all times, and any unnecessary (i.e., except for minor patients and people with disabilities) accompanying person is not allowed into the pavilion; • Relatives are kept informed every day about the patient's clinical conditions by telephone calls. All surgical procedures were reclassified according to the possibility of delaying them without provoking harm to the patient: for less than 24 hours (emergency, for example, severe bleeding), for less than 48 hours (urgency, e.g., orbital complications from sinusitis with no improvement after medical management), for less than 7 days (semiurgency, e.g., histology-proven malignancy deemed to be suitable for a primary surgical treatment by our multidisciplinary cancer team, laryngeal lesions suspected to be malignant, pituitary tumors with initial visual impairment, etc.). 18 For the case series, the following selection criteria were applied to extract the patients: • Semi-urgency or emergency/urgency surgical procedures only; • Patients who reported to have avoided seeking timely medical care because of fear for being infected by SARS-CoV-2 in hospital; • Patients who did not receive surgery because of the COVID-19 associated lockdown measures. Institutional Review Board was obtained (17104/OSS) and written informed consent was always requested before every procedure and images were adequately modified in order not to allow the patient's identification. Given the eminently illustrative aim of the present work, only standard descriptive statistical analysis was performed. (Table 1 ) while 9 patients were treated as emergency or urgency ( Table 2 ). The volume of elective procedures decreased by 78% while, the number of emergency/urgency procedures increased by 128% in the weeks 11 to 18 compared to the prelockdown period. All elective patients obtained a pharyngeal swab 24 hours before hospitalization and they were all negative for SARS-CoV-2. Even in the group of emergency/urgency, it was always possible to obtain a negative swab: 4/9 (44.4%) were already hospitalized and with a negative swab, 5/9 (55.6%) obtained a pharyngeal swab before to underwent surgery. It must be noticed that, unfortunately, on March 8, 2020, a head and neck surgeon from our team tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and he was subsequently hospitalized to the intensive care unit (ICU) for a severe pneumonia; most of the staff was put in quarantine by the authorities and the ward was temporarily closed. Three otolaryngologists were not directly exposed and, thus, they managed to guarantee the essential levels of care while remaining on-call for the following 14 days. At the end of the quarantine period, all the members of the staff obtained pharyngeal swabs and RT-PCR for viral RNA detection: we all tested negative while the infected surgeon finally recovered and he was discharged home after 32 days. By reviewing clinical records of the nine patients in Table 2 , who referred to our service for conditions requiring emergency/urgency surgery, three (33.3%) had a delayed access to ED (mean delay = 8.3 days). As a comparison, if we look at our surgical series in the last 5 years from our digital records, we treated only two cases of severe necrotizing fasciitis and one Pott's puffy tumor (i.e., less than 1 a year). Two patients reported fear for contracting SARS-CoV-2 (cases 1 and 4), while one added he was also worried not to receive sufficient care because of the "overwhelmed hospital" (case 2). Taking into account only the patients who were requested to undergo non-deferrable procedures, 2/24 (8.3%) patients who were already scheduled for surgery refused hospitalization and they were postponed. One of them refused surgery because of fear for COVID-19 (case 3), whereas the other one because of forbidden interregional movements (case 5). Five cases fulfilled the aforementioned selection criteria and they are briefly presented in the following paragraphs. A 77-year old male, with type II diabetes mellitus and receiving tocilizumab because of giant cell arteritis, came to our ED complaining of fever and a neck swelling. In the previous 8 days because of acute left submandibular infection, he was empirically treated at home with amoxicillin/clavulanic acid. On admission, body temperature was 38.6 C, BP was 90/50 mmHg and HR was 150 bpm, his neck was swollen with ecchymotic areas. A CT scan of the head and neck region and of the chest confirmed acute submandibular sialadenitis complicated by neck and mediastinal necrotizing fasciitis (Figure 2A,B) . IV meropenem and linezolid were started and we urgently performed a bilateral neck incision with extensive debridement and drainage of purulent material while concurrent thoracotomy was performed to drain mediastinal fluid. After a 5-hour procedure, the patient was moved to the ICU where he, unfortunately, died 3 hours later. A 67-year old male retired physician came to ED for altered mental status. In the past 7 days, he complained of nasal congestion and F I G U R E 1 Bar chart: On the x axis, week number from the beginning of 2020; on the y axis, overall number of admissions to our ED. Starting from the tenth week, a stratification between patients coming to the ED for COVID-19-associated symptoms and for other symptoms is given purulent discharge that were self-treated at home with empiric antibiotic therapy. Even when fever (up to 40 C) developed, the patient refused to go immediately to the hospital because of fear of contagion. An urgent CT scan of the paranasal sinuses and the brain revealed acute frontal rhinosinusitis complicated by a cerebral abscess in the right hemisphere ( Figure 2C,D) . A broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy with piperacillin/tazobactam and vancomycin was administered, and he underwent urgent endoscopic surgical drainage of A 60-year old male was scheduled for the excision of a right para- A 76-year old female came to ED complaining of swelling, erythema, and ptosis of her left superior eyelid; despite proper counseling, she refused hospitalization and was discharged at home with oral antibiotic therapy. Three weeks later, she came back to ED with diplopia, periorbital pain, and a Pott's puffy tumor that started to appear 10 days before. Strikingly, she admitted she did not seek medical advice because of in-hospital contagion fear. CT scan of the paranasal sinuses and orbits revealed acute frontal rhinosinusitis complicated by orbital involvement (Figure 3G,H) . IV piperacillin/tazobactam and vancomycin was administered, a Draf IIB procedure with a medial orbital decompression was performed and a drainage was placed for 3 weeks were diagnosed every day, overloading EDs and ICUs and, as a consequence, the whole regional health care system. 24 Fortunately, in the rest of the peninsula, the impact was much less dramatic. This has allowed the other non-red zones to do a substantial reorganization of hospitals' activity and better control many COVID-19 indirect side effects. These structural changes have been fundamental in order to cope with the increasing number of severely ill patients due to COVID-19 and to reduce at minimum the risk of in-hospital transmission both to patients and to HCW. 16 In view of the reduction of elective surgery, the increase of head and neck emergency/urgency procedures that we registered can simply reflect the conversion into "COVID-19 centers" of many non-referral hospitals in Tuscany and the centralization of emergencies to our ED, as it happened in other centers. 25 As a matter of fact, other authors have reported a reduction in (general) surgical emergencies during the lockdown period but this probably depends on the logistical aspects of health care reorganization during the pandemic and on many other preexisting factors (number of patients yearly served, etc.). 26 In addition, our experience suggests how the fear of infringing social distancing rules or of being infected may even convert common disorders into challenging surgical emergencies. In such dramatic context, otolaryngologists-head and neck surgeons are known to be particularly at risk for SARS-CoV-2 infection, as several aerosol-generating procedures are daily performed. 14 To reduce HCWs' exposure to aerosolized particles, some authors have proposed alternative approaches to surgery when feasible, such as radiotherapy for many head and neck cancers. 15 The consequences of this treatment shift are yet unknown but, in this perspective, an interesting model has estimated a catastrophic impact that a 3-month or a 6-month delay to surgery may have on survival rates of several cancers (−17% and −30%, respectively). 27 More specifically, for a stage III laryngeal cancer diagnosed in the population aged 50-59, a six-month delay would yield a net reduction of 35.4% in terms of survival. 27 Apart from cancer patients, another "covidlateral" effect derived from those surgical procedures that cannot just be postponed. By surfing on the internet and/or watching the terrific news, many citizens have probably thought that hospitals were an important source of contagion and that they were so overwhelmed that there was no chance to be treated. Accordingly, they often chose to stay at home with inappropriate, if any, treatments. Our experience parallels the one depicted by our Italian colleagues in several departments of Pediatrics: because the usual health care provider was unavailable and/or hospital access was even discouraged, many young patients did not receive timely care with a dramatic rise in morbidity and mortality. 28 As with any preliminary report on a novel subject, our work is not without limitations. As already stated, we have never experienced the tragic case burden of our colleagues in Northern Italy where, reasonably, more severe disruption of the health care system was registered. 29 Secondly, while we strove to give a preliminary full picture of the effects of COVID-19 on a head and neck surgery service, we admit that otologic and lateral skull base procedures were essentially excluded given they represent only a very small fraction of our Institutional activities. Because mastoidectomy is a high-risk aerosolgenerating procedure that can become non-deferrable in some cases of complicated acute otitis media or cholesteatoma, future reports are needed. 30 ACKNOWLEDGMENT To all the staff at our Department which has brilliantly faced this unprecedented situation. A new coronavirus associated with human respiratory disease in China How did we get here? Short history of COVID-19 and other coronavirus-related epidemics World Health Organization. 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This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.