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Quantifying and Mitigating the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Outcomes in Colorectal Cancer

25 Pages Posted: 8 Jun 2020

See all articles by Amit Sud

Amit Sud

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

Michael E. Jones

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

John Broggio

Public Health England - National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service

Stephen Scott

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

Chey Loveday

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

Bethany Torr

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

Alice Garrett

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

David L. Nicol

Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust - Urology Unit

Shaman Jhanji

Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust - Department of Anaesthesia

Stephen A. Boyce

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - Department of Colorectal Surgery

Matthew Williams

Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - Department of Clinical Oncology

Georgios Lyratzopoulos

Public Health England - National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service

Claire Barry

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

Elio Riboli

Imperial College London - School of Public Health

Emma Kipps

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

Ethna McFerran

Queen's University Belfast - School of Medicine, Dentistry & Biomedical Science

Mark Lawler

Queen's University Belfast - School of Medicine, Dentistry & Biomedical Science

David C. Muller

Imperial College London - School of Public Health

Muti Abulafi

NHS Foundation Trust - Croydon University Hospital

Richard S. Houlston

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

Clare Turnbull

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

More...

Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused disruption across cancer pathways for diagnosis and treatment. In England, 32% of colorectal cancer (CRC) is diagnosed via urgent symptomatic referral from primary care, the “2-week-wait” (2WW) pathway. Access to routine endoscopy is likely to be a critical bottleneck causing delays in CRC management due to chronic limitation in capacity, acute competition for physician time, and safety concerns.

Methods: We used age-specific, stage-specific 10 year CRC survival for England 2007-2017 and 2WW CRC cases volumes. We used per-day hazard ratios of CRC survival generated from observational studies of CRC diagnosis-to-treatment interval to model the effect of different durations of per-patient delay. We utilised data from a large London observational study of faecal immunochemical testing (FIT) in symptomatic patients to model FIT-triage to mitigate delay to colonoscopy.

Findings: Modest delays result in significant reduction in survival from CRC with a 4-month delay resulting across age groups in ≥20% reduction in survival in Stage 3 disease and in total over a year, 1,419 attributable deaths across the 11,266 CRC patients diagnosed via the 2WW pathway. FIT triage of >10 ug Hb/g would salvage 1,292/1,419 of the attributable deaths and reduce colonoscopy requirements by >80%. Diagnostic colonoscopy offers net survival in all age groups, providing nosocomial COVID-19 infection rates are kept low (<2·5%).

Interpretation: To avoid significant numbers of avoidable deaths from CRC, normal diagnostic and surgical throughput must be maintained. An accrued backlog of cases will present to primary care following release of lockdown, supranormal endoscopy capacity will be required to manage this without undue delays. FIT-triage of symptomatic cases provides a rational approach by which to avoid patient delay and mitigate pressure on capacity in endoscopy. This would also reduce exposure to nosocomial COVID-19 infection, relevant in particular to older patient groups.

Funding Statement: MEJ additionally received funding from Breast Cancer Now. B.T and A.G. are supported by Cancer Research UK award C61296/A27223. C.L. and C.T. receive support from the Movember foundation. R.S.H. is supported by Cancer Research UK (C1298/A8362) and Bobby Moore Fund for Cancer. GL is supported by a Cancer Research UK Advanced Clinician Scientist Fellowship Award [C18081/A18180] and is Associate Director of the multi-institutional CanTest Collaborative funded by Cancer Research UK [C8640/A23385]. Research UK). D.C.M is supported by Cancer Research UK (C57955/A24390. A.S. is in receipt of an Academic Clinical Lectureship from National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) post-doctoral support. This is a summary of independent research supported by the NIHR BRC at the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and Institute of Cancer Research.

Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

Keywords: COVID-19; Oncology; Colonoscopy; Endoscopy; Fecal Immunochemical Test; FIT; Bowel; Colorectal; Cancer; Pandemic; delay in treatment

Suggested Citation

Sud, Amit and Jones, Michael E. and Broggio, John and Scott, Stephen and Loveday, Chey and Torr, Bethany and Garrett, Alice and Nicol, David L. and Jhanji, Shaman and Boyce, Stephen A. and Williams, Matthew and Lyratzopoulos, Georgios and Barry, Claire and Riboli, Elio and Kipps, Emma and McFerran, Ethna and Lawler, Mark and Muller, David C. and Abulafi, Muti and Houlston, Richard S. and Turnbull, Clare, Quantifying and Mitigating the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Outcomes in Colorectal Cancer (4/28/2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3590479 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3590479

Amit Sud

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

Michael E. Jones

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

John Broggio

Public Health England - National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service

Wellington House
London
United Kingdom

Stephen Scott

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

London
United Kingdom

Chey Loveday

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

Bethany Torr

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

Alice Garrett

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

David L. Nicol

Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust - Urology Unit

London
United Kingdom

Shaman Jhanji

Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust - Department of Anaesthesia

London
United Kingdom

Stephen A. Boyce

Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - Department of Colorectal Surgery

United States

Matthew Williams

Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust - Department of Clinical Oncology

Praed St
London
United Kingdom

Georgios Lyratzopoulos

Public Health England - National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service

Wellington House
133-155 Waterloo Road
London, SE1 8UG
United Kingdom

Claire Barry

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

London
United Kingdom

Elio Riboli

Imperial College London - School of Public Health

London, SW7 2AZ
United Kingdom

Emma Kipps

West London Cancer Alliance - RM Partners

London
United Kingdom

Ethna Mcferran

Queen's University Belfast - School of Medicine, Dentistry & Biomedical Science

Belfast
Ireland

Mark Lawler

Queen's University Belfast - School of Medicine, Dentistry & Biomedical Science

Belfast
Ireland

David C. Muller

Imperial College London - School of Public Health

London, SW7 2AZ
United Kingdom

Muti Abulafi

NHS Foundation Trust - Croydon University Hospital

Croydon, CR7 7YE
United Kingdom

Richard S. Houlston

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology

London
United Kingdom

Clare Turnbull (Contact Author)

Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) - Division of Genetics and Epidemiology ( email )

London
United Kingdom
020 8722 4487 (Phone)

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