Due to the high number of patients requiring shoulder or knee arthroscopy, assessing the epidemiology of shoulder and knee arthroscopies during the COVID-19 pandemic is important.
Previous reports estimated the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on lowering the number of orthopedic procedures, including arthroscopies, in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland; and a decrease in the number of European centers performing elective arthroscopies has been speculated [4, 5].
There have been no studies analyzing the impact of a nation-wide pandemic-related lockdown on the real-world epidemiology of shoulder and knee arthroscopies performed in individual orthopedic departments.
The COVID-19 pandemic considerably altered the way the healthcare systems (including orthopedic departments) functioned in many countries [2–19]. Doctors, nurses, and rehabilitation specialists found themselves in a new reality. Some healthcare professionals contracted COVID-19, some were quarantined, others were delegated to work with COVID-19-positive patients [2, 3]. Elective admissions to most trauma and orthopedic words were limited (at first) and then, completely halted in order to limit the spread of the causative pathogen, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) [2–5, 10]. In other centers, a large proportion of patients cancelled or postponed their scheduled procedure due to fears of COVID-19 infection. However, as the pandemic continued, recommendations to resume elective procedures, including arthroscopies, began to emerge [6, 7, 8, 11].
Literature reports estimated a 23–100% decline in the total number of elective surgical procedures being performed [2, 4, 5, 10]. The COVID-19 pandemic saw arthroscopies being cancelled or postponed (delayed) in an estimated 38.9–69.2% of centers [4, 5]. Our study shows that the COVID-19 pandemic had no significant impact on the number of arthroscopic procedures in the evaluated 2020 period in comparison with the pre-pandemic period. This may be a result of significant restrictions imposed (in our orthopedics department) on procedures involving larger numbers of personnel and those potentially requiring blood transfusions and longer hospitalization; such procedures include total hip or knee arthroplasty. The relatively long waiting list for an elective arthroscopy in our center was another reason why patients—reluctant to have the waiting period extended even more—avoided cancelling their surgery and presented for the procedures as scheduled, despite the COVID-19 pandemic.
There have been no studies assessing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the age of patients undergoing shoulder or knee arthroscopy. Our study did not showed a marked effect of the pandemic and nation-wide lockdown measures on the mean age of patients undergoing arthroscopic procedures. The fact that their mean age did not decreased may be due to the elderly did not fearing SARS-CoV-2 infection and its possible complications.
There have been no studies evaluating the effect of lockdown measures on the mean duration of hospital stay following shoulder or knee arthroscopy. Our data showed the mean hospitalization, which was lower at 2.8 days in 2019, increased to 3.1 days during the pandemic. This resulted from several factors: a longer waiting period before the procedure, due to the limited number of available orthopedic surgeons and anesthesiologists during the pandemic, and the priority being given to managing patients with fresh injuries.
There have been no studies assessing the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the male-to-female ratio in patients undergoing arthroscopy. During the evaluated 2020 period, we observed a considerable reduction in the number of male patients and a considerable increase in the number of female patients in comparison with the figures for the corresponding period in 2019.