@article {Pricee040898, author = {Stephen John Price and Alexis Joannides and Puneet Plaha and Fardad Taghizadeh Afshari and Erminia Albanese and Neil U Barua and Huan Wee Chan and Giles Critchley and Thomas Flannery and Daniel M Fountain and Ryan K Mathew and Rory J Piper and Michael TC Poon and Chittoor Rajaraman and Ola Rominiyi and Stuart Smith and Georgios Solomou and Anna Solth and Surash Surash and Victoria Wykes and Colin Watts and Helen Bulbeck and Peter Hutchinson and Michael D Jenkinson}, editor = {,}, title = {Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on surgical neuro-oncology multi-disciplinary team decision making: a national survey (COVID-CNSMDT Study)}, volume = {10}, number = {8}, elocation-id = {e040898}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040898}, publisher = {British Medical Journal Publishing Group}, abstract = {Objectives Pressures on healthcare systems due to COVID-19 has impacted patients without COVID-19 with surgery disproportionally affected. This study aims to understand the impact on the initial management of patients with brain tumours by measuring changes to normal multidisciplinary team (MDT) decision making.Design A prospective survey performed in UK neurosurgical units performed from 23 March 2020 until 24 April 2020.Setting Regional neurosurgical units outside London (as the pandemic was more advanced at time of study).Participants Representatives from all units were invited to collect data on new patients discussed at their MDT meetings during the study period. Each unit decided if management decision for each patient had changed due to COVID-19.Primary and secondary outcome measures Primary outcome measures included number of patients where the decision to undergo surgery changed compared with standard management usually offered by that MDT. Secondary outcome measures included changes in surgical extent, numbers referred to MDT, number of patients denied surgery not receiving any treatment and reasons for any variation across the UK.Results 18 units (75\%) provided information from 80 MDT meetings that discussed 1221 patients. 10.7\% of patients had their management changed{\textemdash}the majority (68\%) did not undergo surgery and more than half of this group not undergoing surgery had no active treatment. There was marked variation across the UK (0\%{\textendash}28\% change in management). Units that did not change management could maintain capacity with dedicated oncology lists. Low volume units were less affected.Conclusion COVID-19 has had an impact on patients requiring surgery for malignant brain tumours, with patients receiving different treatments{\textemdash}most commonly not receiving surgery or any treatment at all. The variations show dedicated cancer operating lists may mitigate these pressures.Study registration This study was registered with the Royal College of Surgeons of England{\textquoteright}s COVID-19 Research Group (https://www.rcseng.ac.uk/coronavirus/rcs-covid-research-group/).}, issn = {2044-6055}, URL = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/8/e040898}, eprint = {https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/8/e040898.full.pdf}, journal = {BMJ Open} }