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Published in: Annals of Surgical Oncology 13/2023

11-09-2023 | Colonoscopy | Colorectal Cancer

Growing Deficit in New Cancer Diagnoses 2 Years Into the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Multicenter Study

Authors: Brian R. Englum, MD, MHS, FACS, Shalini Sahoo, MA, Minerva Mayorga-Carlin, MPH, Hilary Hayssen, MD, Tariq Siddiqui, MS, Douglas J. Turner, MD, John D. Sorkin, MD, PhD, Brajesh K. Lal, MD, FACS

Published in: Annals of Surgical Oncology | Issue 13/2023

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Abstract

Background

Large decreases in cancer diagnoses were seen early in the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the evolution of these deficits since the end of 2020 and the advent of widespread vaccination is unknown.

Methods

This study examined data from the Veterans Health Administration (VA) from 1 January 2018 through 28 February 2022 and identified patients with screening or diagnostic procedures or new cancer diagnoses for the four most common cancers in the VA health system: prostate, lung, colorectal, and bladder cancers. Monthly procedures and new diagnoses were calculated, and the pre-COVID era (January 2018 to February 2020) was compared with the COVID era (March 2020 to February 2022).

Results

The study identified 2.5 million patients who underwent a diagnostic or screening procedure related to the four cancers. A new cancer was diagnosed for 317,833 patients. During the first 2 years of the pandemic, VA medical centers performed 13,022 fewer prostate biopsies, 32,348 fewer cystoscopies, and 200,710 fewer colonoscopies than in 2018–2019. These persistent deficits added a cumulative deficit of nearly 19,000 undiagnosed prostate cancers and 3300 to 3700 undiagnosed cancers each for lung, colon, and bladder. Decreased diagnostic and screening procedures correlated with decreased new diagnoses of cancer, particularly cancer of the prostate (R = 0.44) and bladder (R = 0.27).

Conclusion

Disruptions in new diagnoses of four common cancers (prostate, lung, bladder, and colorectal) seen early in the COVID-19 pandemic have persisted for 2 years. Although reductions improved from the early pandemic, new reductions during the Delta and Omicron waves demonstrate the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cancer care.
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Metadata
Title
Growing Deficit in New Cancer Diagnoses 2 Years Into the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Multicenter Study
Authors
Brian R. Englum, MD, MHS, FACS
Shalini Sahoo, MA
Minerva Mayorga-Carlin, MPH
Hilary Hayssen, MD
Tariq Siddiqui, MS
Douglas J. Turner, MD
John D. Sorkin, MD, PhD
Brajesh K. Lal, MD, FACS
Publication date
11-09-2023
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Annals of Surgical Oncology / Issue 13/2023
Print ISSN: 1068-9265
Electronic ISSN: 1534-4681
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-023-14217-5

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