Publication date: Feb 15, 2025
Studies show conflicting results regarding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the treatment of patients with coronary artery disease requiring cardiac surgery and data from Germany are lacking. In this study, two patient cohorts who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery before and after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic were compared. Patients who presented for coronary artery bypass graft surgery before (01. 05. 18-30. 04. 19; group “B”) or during the COVID-19 pandemic (01. 05. 20-30. 04. 21; group “P”) at the University Hospital McFCnster in Germany were retrospectively identified and compared regarding demographics, preoperative status, surgical data, and postoperative outcome. 513 (group “B”) and 501 patients (group “P”) were included, demographics were comparable. In group “P”, preoperative myocardial infarction and emergency indications were more frequent, heart-lung machine and aortic clamping times were longer. Postoperative ICU-days and inpatient stay did not differ. Postoperative need of an extracorporeal life support system and intrahospital mortality tended to be higher in group “P”, without reaching statistical significance. The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on cardiac surgical care with the prioritization of emergency procedures. Patients treated during the pandemic were in a more critical preoperative condition, duration of surgery was longer, but post-operative mortality was comparable.
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 pandemic |
disease | MESH | coronary artery disease |
disease | MESH | myocardial infarction |
disease | MESH | emergency |
disease | MESH | Postoperative Complications |