The risk of harm whilst waiting for varicose veins procedure

Author:

Bootun Roshan12ORCID,Burrows Mandy2,Chowdhury Mohammed M23,Stather Philip W24ORCID,Al-Jundi Wissam25

Affiliation:

1. Vascular Trainee, East of England Deanery, United Kingdom, and Honorary Research Fellow, Section of Vascular Surgery, Imperial College London, UK

2. Department of Vascular Surgery, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, UK

3. NIHR Clinical Lecturer in Vascular Surgery, Department of Vascular Surgery, Cambridge University Hospitals, University of Cambridge, UK

4. Clinical Associate Professor, Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, UK

5. Honorary Senior Lecturer, Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, UK

Abstract

Introduction Varicose veins (VV) negatively impact quality of life (QoL) and have risks of major complications including bleeding, ulceration and phlebitis. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the VSGBI (Vascular Society of Great Britain and Ireland) and GIRFT (Get It Right First Time) classified VVs as lowest priority for intervention. Objective This study aims to determine harm caused and the impact on the QoL on patients waiting for their VVs procedures for more than 1 year. Methods This was a prospective study conducted at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital (NNUH). Patients with VVs awaiting intervention for >1 year were included in the study. Patients with CEAP C6 disease were considered to be too high risk to be invited for treatment during the Covid-19 pandemic. Patients were sent QoL questionnaires and underwent a telephone consultation to assess harm. Both generic (EQ-VAS and EQ-5D) and disease-specific (AVVQ and CIVIQ-14) instruments were utilised. There were no control groups available for comparison. Results 275 patients were identified (37.1% male) with median time on waiting list of 60 weeks (IQR 56–65). 19 patients (6.9%) came to major harm, including phlebitis (3.6%), bleeding (1.8%) and ulceration (1.8%). Fifty-two patients (18.9%) had minor harm, including worsening pain (12.7%) and swelling (6.2%). 6.9% reported psychological harm. Rising CEAP stage was also associated with worsening level of harm in patients with C5-6 disease ( p < 0.0001). Only 8.7% stated they would decline surgery during the pandemic. 104 QoL questionnaires were returned. Median EQ-VAS and EQ-5D was 75 (IQR: 60–85) and 0.685 (0.566–0.761), respectively. Median AVVQ score was 23.2 (14.9–31.0) and CIVIQ-14 score was 33 (21–44). ConclusionsThis study highlights the impact of delaying VVs surgery during a pandemic. A significant rate of both major and minor as well as psychological harm was reported. In addition, VVs had a significant detriment to quality of life.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine

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