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Influence of COVID-19 pandemic on colon cancer presentations.

Frontiers in oncology 2026 Vol.16() p. 1667288

Pietreanu AC, Vasile AI, Cheregi C, Trifu S, Cristea BM, Socea B

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[AIM] We assumed that patients would present during the pandemic with more advanced, more disseminated, and more symptomatic forms of colon cancer.

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APA Pietreanu AC, Vasile AI, et al. (2026). Influence of COVID-19 pandemic on colon cancer presentations.. Frontiers in oncology, 16, 1667288. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2026.1667288
MLA Pietreanu AC, et al.. "Influence of COVID-19 pandemic on colon cancer presentations.." Frontiers in oncology, vol. 16, 2026, pp. 1667288.
PMID 41800060

Abstract

[AIM] We assumed that patients would present during the pandemic with more advanced, more disseminated, and more symptomatic forms of colon cancer.

[MATERIALS AND METHODS] We did a retrospective observational study that analyzed the database of the General Surgery Department of a tertiary care center in Romania, analyzing information about the patients from their clinical charts. The study was conducted on 204 patients diagnosed with colon cancer, subdivided into the pre-pandemic group (2019) and the pandemic group (2020). The ages varied between 27 and 95 years old, male and female. We measured: age, gender, year of admission, tumor localization, admission reasons, colon cancer emergencies, post-operative colon cancer complications, endoscopic tumor characteristics, histopathologic result, concomitant colonoscopy finding, presence and sites of metastases, and discharge status.

[RESULTS] The number of presentations was lower in the pandemic year, but non-significant. During the pandemic, patients presented more with abdominal bloating, infiltrative tumors, multiple metastases, especially peritoneal metastases, indicating a more advanced local disease. As for colon cancer emergencies, inferior digestive hemorrhage occurred more frequently, consistent with more locally aggressive tumor behavior.

[CONCLUSIONS] During the pandemic, more patients presented with more oncologically advanced forms of colon cancer, but the cancer-related in-hospital mortality was not influenced. While the pandemic did not increase overall emergency presentations or short-term mortality, it was associated with delayed diagnosis and a higher burden of locally advanced and metastatic colon cancer at presentation.