Management changes for patients with endocrine-related cancers in the COVID-19 pandemic

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Abstract

Substantial management changes in endocrine-related malignancies have been required as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including a draconian reduction in the screening of asymptomatic subjects, delay in planned surgery and radiotherapy for primary tumors deemed to be indolent, and dose reductions and/or delays in initiation of some systemic therapies. An added key factor has been a patient-initiated delay in the presentation because of the fear of viral infection. Patterns of clinical consultation have changed, including a greater level of virtual visits, physical spacing, masking, staffing changes to ensure a COVID-free population and significant changes in patterns of family involvement. While this has occurred to improve safety from COVID-19 infection, the implications for cancer outcomes have not yet been defined. Based on prior epidemics and financial recessions, it is likely that delayed presentation and treatment of high-grade malignancy will be associated with worse cancer outcomes. Cancer patients are also at increased risk from COVID-19 infection compared to the general population. Pandemic management strategies for patients with tumors of breast, prostate, thyroid, parathyroid and adrenal gland are reviewed.

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Raghavan, D., Tan, A. R., Shannon Story, E., Burgess, E. F., Musselwhite, L., Kim, E. S., & Clark, P. E. (2020). Management changes for patients with endocrine-related cancers in the COVID-19 pandemic. Endocrine-Related Cancer. BioScientifica Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1530/ERC-20-0229

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