Background <p>During the<!--Query ID="Q1" Text="Please check the article title if captured and presented correctly. Otherwise amend if deemed necessary. " Resolved="yes"--> first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, several studies – including our own - demonstrated a significant decrease in emergency surgical presentations, including acute appendicitis (AA). While these early findings are well documented, little is known about how presentation patterns and clinical outcomes evolved across subsequent pandemic waves. This study examines longer-term trends in AA care across three distinct pandemic phases, highlighting how healthcare systems and patient responses adapted over time within a tertiary surgical setting.</p> Methods <p>We conducted a ret<!--Query ID="Q2" Text="Please check and confirm that the authors and their respective affiliations have been correctly identified and amend if necessary. " Resolved="yes"-->rospective single-center cohort study. Patients undergoing appendectomy between March 2020 and December 2021 were assigned to distinct pandemic phases based <!--Query ID="Q3" Text="Kindly check and confirm whether the corresponding author is correctly identified and amend if necessary. " Resolved="yes"-->on national SARS-CoV-2 incidence (wave 2, wave 3, and wave 4). These were each compared separately to a pre-pandemic reference cohort treated between January 2019 and February 2020. Demographic data, clinical presentation, laboratory values, histological findings, and postoperative outcomes were analyzed.</p> Results <p>Throughout the pan<!--Query ID="Q4" Text="Please check if the affiliations are presented correctly. " Resolved="yes"-->demic period, the number of appendectomies remained lower than in the pre-pandemic reference group, particularly during high-incidence phases. Patients in wave 2 presented with more advanced disease, including significantly higher rates of perforation and peritonitis. In waves 3 and 4, disease severity and postoperative outcomes were comparable to the pre-pandemic reference period.</p> Conclusion <p>This long-term analysis s<!--Query ID="Q5" Text="Journal instruction requires a city and country for affiliations; however, these are missing in affiliations [2, 3, 4 and 5]. Please verify if the provided city and country are correct and amend if necessary. " Resolved="yes"-->uggests that the initial shift toward more advanced disease among patients undergoing appendectomy was not sustained, with presentation patterns and outcomes tending toward pre-pandemic levels during later pandemic waves. These findings may reflect adaptive processes within the healthcare system, despite ongoing external stress.</p>

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Adaptation of emergency surgical care during successive COVID-19 waves: a single-center analysis of surgically treated acute appendicitis

  • Michael Hoffmann,
  • Matthias Schrempf,
  • Luis Arbona de Gracia,
  • Anna Muzalyova,
  • Marie Freitag,
  • Christoph Römmele,
  • Florian Sommer,
  • Matthias Anthuber,
  • Sebastian Wolf

摘要

Background

During the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, several studies – including our own - demonstrated a significant decrease in emergency surgical presentations, including acute appendicitis (AA). While these early findings are well documented, little is known about how presentation patterns and clinical outcomes evolved across subsequent pandemic waves. This study examines longer-term trends in AA care across three distinct pandemic phases, highlighting how healthcare systems and patient responses adapted over time within a tertiary surgical setting.

Methods

We conducted a retrospective single-center cohort study. Patients undergoing appendectomy between March 2020 and December 2021 were assigned to distinct pandemic phases based on national SARS-CoV-2 incidence (wave 2, wave 3, and wave 4). These were each compared separately to a pre-pandemic reference cohort treated between January 2019 and February 2020. Demographic data, clinical presentation, laboratory values, histological findings, and postoperative outcomes were analyzed.

Results

Throughout the pandemic period, the number of appendectomies remained lower than in the pre-pandemic reference group, particularly during high-incidence phases. Patients in wave 2 presented with more advanced disease, including significantly higher rates of perforation and peritonitis. In waves 3 and 4, disease severity and postoperative outcomes were comparable to the pre-pandemic reference period.

Conclusion

This long-term analysis suggests that the initial shift toward more advanced disease among patients undergoing appendectomy was not sustained, with presentation patterns and outcomes tending toward pre-pandemic levels during later pandemic waves. These findings may reflect adaptive processes within the healthcare system, despite ongoing external stress.