Feature

Three months of COVID-19 may mean 80,000 missed cancer diagnoses


 

More than 80,000 diagnoses of five common cancers may be missed or delayed by early June because of disruptions to health care caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report by the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science looking at trends in the United States.

Pandemic effect: Missed cancer diagnoses

Screening and monitoring tests for breast, prostate, colorectal, cervical, and lung cancer were down 39%-90% in early April, compared with the baseline month of February, according to report authors Murray Aitken and Michael Kleinrock, both of IQVIA.


These findings are based on data from IQVIA’s medical claims database, which includes more than 205 million patients, over 1.7 billion claims, and 3 billion service records obtained annually.

The data suggest that, at current positivity rates, there could be 36,000 missed or delayed diagnoses of breast cancer during the 3-month period from early March through early June. Estimates for missed diagnoses of the four other cancers analyzed include 450 for lung cancer, 2,500 for cervical cancer, 18,800 for colorectal cancer, and 22,600 for prostate cancer.

The authors project a total of 22 million canceled or delayed tests for the five cancers over the 3-month period ending June 5, based on a comparison of claims data for early April with the February baseline. Catching up on this backlog will be problematic, according to the authors.


“Current excess health care capacity ... would require providers to shift priorities to make time and space in schedules and facilities as well as the cooperation of patients to return to health care providers,” the authors wrote. “Both of these could be further disrupted by economic factors or reintroduction of social distancing in a reemergence of the outbreak.”


The report was produced by the IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science without industry or government funding.

SOURCE: Murray A and Kleinrock M. Shifts in healthcare demand, delivery and care during the COVID-19 era. IQVIA Institute for Human Data Science. April 2020.

Recommended Reading

Advice from the front lines: How cancer centers can cope with COVID-19
Breast Cancer ICYMI
‘Brutal’ plan to restrict palliative radiation during pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Conducting cancer trials amid the COVID-19 pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Oncologists need to advocate for scarce COVID-19 resources: ASCO
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Cancer care ‘transformed in space of a month’ because of pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Want to keep cancer patients and providers safe during the pandemic? Here’s how
Breast Cancer ICYMI
European cancer centers restructure care in the era of COVID-19
Breast Cancer ICYMI
ASCO panel outlines cancer care challenges during COVID-19 pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Excess cancer deaths predicted as care is disrupted by COVID-19
Breast Cancer ICYMI
Cancer screening, monitoring down during pandemic
Breast Cancer ICYMI