The 4C Initiative (Clinical Care for Cardiovascular disease in the COVID-19 pandemic): monitoring the indirect impact of the coronavirus pandemic on services for cardiovascular diseases in the UK
By
CVD-COVID-UK Consortium,
Simon Ball,
Amitava Banerjee,
Colin Berry,
Jonathan Boyle,
Benjamin Bray,
William Bradlow,
Afzal Chaudhry,
Rikki Crawley,
John Danesh,
Alastair Denniston,
Florian Falter,
Jonine Figueroa,
Christopher Hall,
Harry Hemingway,
Emily Jefferson,
Tom Johnson,
Graham King,
Ken Lee,
Paul McKean,
Suzanne Mason,
Nicholas Mills,
Ewen Pearson,
Munir Pirmohamed,
Michael T. C. Poon,
Rouven Priedon,
Anoop Shah,
Reecha Sofat,
Jonathan Sterne,
Fiona Strachan,
Cathie LM Sudlow,
Zsolt Szarka,
William Whiteley,
Mike Wyatt
Posted 11 Jul 2020
medRxiv DOI: 10.1101/2020.07.10.20151118
Background: The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic affects cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) directly through infection and indirectly through health service reorganisation and public health policy. Real-time data are needed to quantify direct and indirect effects. We aimed to monitor hospital activity for presentation, diagnosis and treatment of CVDs during the pandemic to inform on indirect effects. Methods: We analysed aggregate data on presentations, diagnoses and treatments or procedures for selected CVDs (acute coronary syndromes, heart failure, stroke and transient ischaemic attack, venous thromboembolism, peripheral arterial disease and aortic aneurysm) in UK hospitals before and during the COVID-19 epidemic. We produced an online visualisation tool to enable near real-time monitoring of trends. Findings: Nine hospitals across England and Scotland contributed hospital activity data from 28 Oct 2019 (pre-COVID-19) to 10 May 2020 (pre-easing of lockdown), and for the same weeks during 2018-2019. Across all hospitals, total admissions and emergency department (ED) attendances decreased after lockdown (23 March 2020) by 57.9% (57.1-58.6%) and 52.9% (52.2-53.5%) respectively compared with the previous year. Activity for cardiac, cerebrovascular and other vascular conditions started to decline 1-2 weeks before lockdown, and fell by 31-88% after lockdown, with the greatest reductions observed for coronary artery bypass grafts, carotid endarterectomy, aortic aneurysm repair and peripheral arterial disease procedures. Compared with before the first UK COVID-19 (31 January 2020), activity declined across diseases and specialties between the first case and lockdown (total ED attendances RR 0.94, 0.93-0.95; total hospital admissions RR 0.96, 0.95-0.97) and after lockdown (attendances RR 0.63, 0.62-0.64; admissions RR 0.59, 0.57-0.60). There was limited recovery towards usual levels of some activities from mid-April 2020. Interpretation: Substantial reductions in total and cardiovascular activities are likely to contribute to a major burden of indirect effects of the pandemic, suggesting they should be monitored and mitigated urgently.
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