The hospital care of patients with cancerous pathology is part of a multidisciplinary care path that includes many stages. The treatment conditions in this course vary depending on the reasons that led to suspect the existence of a cancerous pathology: accidental discovery, screening, warning signs (sometimes expressed in an acute form) or referral for treatment in charge after the diagnosis has already been made. As soon as the patient presents to the hospital, various expertises are mobilized to establish the diagnosis, carry out the extension assessment and assess the comorbidities and conditions that may have an impact on the choice of treatments. During this initial evaluation, each file is evaluated in a Multidisciplinary Consultation Meeting to define the optimal therapeutic strategy which will often include several stages involving surgery, radiotherapy, medical oncology (chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapy, etc. hormone therapy), interventional radiology, and / or supportive oncological care (nutrition, pain treatment, correction of metabolic abnormalities, palliative care, etc.). This treatment path is considered to be very complex and the fluidity of its organization determines the processing times. The management of patients in a cancer department may vary depending on the organization specific to each hospital. The health crisis induced by the COVID-19 epidemic, associated with the containment measures put in place from March 19 to May 11, 2020, have limited the use of patients in hospitals, even for emergency activities. It has also led to a reorganization of scheduled activities within establishments, with a concentration of resources around unscheduled care, in particular COVID patients. In many establishments, the other activities were, for many, deprogrammed with postponed appointments. The impact of this epidemic on the hospital journey of patients with cancerous pathology is the subject of questions at the national level. The delays in diagnosis and treatment induced have possibly had an impact on the quality of the care and on the delays with, as a corollary, a possible loss of opportunity for the patient.
The hospital care of patients with cancerous pathology is part of a multidisciplinary care
path that includes many stages. The treatment conditions in this course vary depending on the
reasons that led to suspect the existence of a cancerous pathology: accidental discovery,
screening, warning signs (sometimes expressed in an acute form) or referral for treatment in
charge after the diagnosis has already been made. As soon as the patient presents to the
hospital, various expertises are mobilized to establish the diagnosis, carry out the
extension assessment and assess the comorbidities and conditions that may have an impact on
the choice of treatments. During this initial evaluation, each file is evaluated in a
Multidisciplinary Consultation Meeting to define the optimal therapeutic strategy which will
often include several stages involving surgery, radiotherapy, medical oncology (chemotherapy,
immunotherapy, targeted therapy, etc. hormone therapy), interventional radiology, and / or
supportive oncological care (nutrition, pain treatment, correction of metabolic
abnormalities, palliative care, etc.). This treatment path is considered to be very complex
and the fluidity of its organization determines the processing times.
The management of patients in a cancer department may vary depending on the organization
specific to each hospital. Most often, this is secondary management after the patient has
been taken care of by the emergency department - the diagnosis is then suspected but not yet
established - or tertiary by a medical specialty service or surgical - the diagnosis is then
established and part of the treatment, in particular surgical, has already been carried out.
Primary care by addressing from correspondents outside the hospital directly to medical
oncology is possible but rarer, particularly at Saint-Joseph Hospital. The first treatment by
the oncology service is therefore carried out after a fairly complex preliminary hospital
course, the duration of which is likely to vary depending on the number and complexity of
each of the preliminary stages. The duration of the different stages of the care pathway is a
very important element in the quality of the care because unjustified delays can impact on
the therapeutic results.
The health crisis induced by the COVID-19 epidemic, associated with the containment measures
put in place from March 19 to May 11, 2020, have limited the use of patients in hospitals,
even for emergency activities. It has also led to a reorganization of scheduled activities
within establishments, with a concentration of resources around unscheduled care, in
particular COVID patients. In many establishments, the other activities were, for many,
deprogrammed with postponed appointments. The impact of this epidemic on the hospital journey
of patients with cancerous pathology is the subject of questions at the national level. The
delays in diagnosis and treatment induced have possibly had an impact on the quality of the
care and on the delays with, as a corollary, a possible loss of opportunity for the patient.
Within the Paris Saint-Joseph Hospital Group, which strongly participated in the management
of the pandemic over the period from March 15 to June 15, 2020, observations were made
compared to the same period in 2019:
- An 80% drop in day hospital stays for gastrology and proctology endoscopy
- A 60% drop in stays in digestive and proctological surgery (full hospitalization, week
or day)
- A 40% decrease in emergency room consultations, as well as an activity focused on the
care of COVID patients
- A decrease in consulting activities
- A reorganization of the healthcare offer: block restricted to emergencies, limitation of
endoscopy activity and imaging activity.
During this epidemic period, a specific organization was adopted within the oncology
department which made it possible to immediately continue the chemotherapy protocols
initiated. Among the measures put in place, the investigators can cite the compulsory wearing
of a mask and hand washing with hydro-alcoholic solution for patients and caregivers, the
restriction of accompanying persons and visits with protection conditions, the
sanctuarization of the service without PCR patients COVID + or symptomatically suspected,
individual monitoring of each suspected or COVID + patient, follow-up teleconsultations, etc.
These measures put in place from March 19, 2020 have made it possible to maintain the
treatments as defined in the SPC for patients already admitted to the service. However, the
hospital journey of patients upstream of their medical oncology treatment has been severely
impacted by the COVID-19 epidemic. In this context, the objectification of the disturbances
induced by the epidemic is of interest from an epidemiological and public health point of
view. It is also likely to nourish reflection on securing the organization of this course
within the establishment. Our work falls within this perspective. The investigators were more
particularly interested in the impact of the COVID-19 epidemic on the care pathway of
digestive cancer patients whose treatment path is complex before arriving in the oncology
department for their first treatment therapeutic load.
A first phase of the study will consist of the description of the hospital journey of
patients with cancer of the digestive system requiring management by the medical oncology
department of the Paris Saint-Joseph hospital. Two periods will be considered (before / after
COVID) in order to assess the impact of the COVID-19 epidemic on the routes studied.
A second phase of the study will consist of modeling the hospital journey based on
observations made during the period preceding the COVID-19 epidemic. This modeling will make
it possible to simulate the impact of any "disruptions" that would be exerted on one or other
of the components of the course (less patient use in the hospital, limited access to various
expertise and technical facilities). The objective pursued in the long term would be to have
a tool that would allow this impact to be anticipated and to test in silico the potential
effectiveness of the measures that could be implemented to limit its extent.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients aged ≥ 18 years
- Patients with primary cancer of the digestive system: cancer of the esophagus,
stomach, small intestine, colon, rectosigmoid junction, rectum, anal canal, liver ,
gall bladder, bile ducts and pancreas;
- Patients hospitalized for the first time in the medical oncology department in full
hospitalization, week or day;
- Patients hospitalized between January 1, 2019 and October 31, 2020
- French-speaking patient
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with secondary cancer or a relapse of cancer of the digestive system
- Patients who do not require hospitalization in medical oncology
- Patient under guardianship or curatorship
- Patient deprived of liberty
- Patient under legal protection
- Patient objecting to the use of their medical data in the context of this study.
Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint-Joseph
Paris, Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint-Joseph, France
Anne BURONFOSSE, MD, Principal Investigator
Groupe Hospitalier Paris Saint Joseph