The Capital

Cancer won’t wait for virus

Despite pandemic shutdowns, doctors urge in-person screenings

- By Jane E. Brody

While a raging pandemic continues to force shutdowns and slowdowns throughout the country, another major risk to human health is not taking a sabbatical: cancer.

In the early months of the pandemic, millions of people heeded warnings and fears about contractin­g the coronaviru­s and avoided in-person medical visits and cancer screenings, allowing newly developed cancers to escape detection and perhaps progress unimpeded.

During this time, there was a steep decline in screenings for cancer, as well as a reluctance of patients with cancer to participat­e in clinical trials for cancer treatments. Many mammograph­y centers, dermatolog­y offices and other venues for cancer screenings remained closed for months, and routine colonoscop­ies, which should be done in hospitals or surgical centers, were actively discourage­d to minimize strain on medical personnel and equipment and reduce the risk of contagion.

Still, Dr. Norman Sharpless, director of the National Cancer Institute, warned in June that missed routine screenings could lead to 10,000 or more excess deaths from breast and colorectal cancers within the next decade.

Cancers cannot be treated unless they’re detected, and a review of 34 studies published in October in the BMJ reported that for every four-week delay in cancer detection and treatment, the risk of death fromcancer rises nearly 10%, on average. The study found increased mortality following delays in treatment for 13 of 17 cancer types. Following a fourweek delay in surgery for breast cancer, the death rate increased by 8%; for colorectal cancer, it rose 6%.

The hazard of delayed screenings is greatest for people with known risk factors for cancer: a family or personal history of the disease, a previous abnormal Pap smear, prior findings of polyps in the colon or rectum, or, in the case of breast and certain other cancers, having genetic mutations that seriously increase cancer risk.

Most screening facilities have since put safety procedures in place that greatly reduce the chance of contractin­g the coronaviru­s, both for staff and patients. Dr. Barry Sleckman, director of the O’Neal Comprehens­ive Cancer Center at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, said, "When it comes to screening for cancer, people should balance the possibilit­y of contractin­g the virus with their potential cancer risk. People should do everything possible to keep up with cancer screenings."

However, Sleckman added, "If awoman is young and has no family history of breast cancer, she can probably wait six months for her next screening mammogram." He also suggested discussing the matter with one’s personal physician, who probably also knows the safest facilities for screening.

If someone is found to have cancer, he emphasized, "There’s no reason to delay treatment. If awoman has cancer in a breast, it needs to be removed, and she should go to a hospital where she can be treated safely."

Dr. David Cohn, chief medical officer at The Ohio State University Comprehens­ive Cancer Center, said that in the early months of the pandemic "we experience­d a significan­t decline in new patients. Even some patients with symptoms were afraid to come in or couldn’t even see their doctors because the offices were closed. This could result in a delayed diagnosis, more complex care and potentiall­y aworse outcome."

But he said his center has since returned to baseline, suggesting that, despite the fall’s surge in COVID-19 cases, few cancer patients now remain undiagnose­d and untreated.

"We made creative adaptation­s to COVID" to maximize patient safety, Cohn said. "For certain cancers, instead of doing surgery upfront, we treated patients with radiation and chemothera­py first, then did surgery later" when therewas less stress on hospital facilities and personnel and patients could be better protected against the virus.

Cohn said that certain kinds of supportive care can be delivered remotely to cancer patients and their families. However, he added, "the majority of cancer treatment has to be administer­ed in person, and surveillan­ce of cancer patients is best done in face-to-face visits."

With the virus surging around the country, many medical centers may be forced to again limit elective procedures, those not deemed urgent. But, Sleckman said, "Cancer treatment is not elective— it’s urgent and should not be delayed."

Learning that one has cancer, even when it is early and potentiall­y highly curable, is likely to strain a person’s ability to cope with adversity, all the more so when the diagnosis occurs in the midst of an already highly stressful and frightenin­g pandemic.

Kristen Carpenter, a psychologi­st at the Ohio cancer center, said the constraint­s of the pandemic are "using up a lot of people’s reserve for dealing with adversity." Adding a cancer diagnosis on top of that may initially cause people to fear they can’t deal with it, she said.

But it is nearly always possible to make more roomin a person’s "bucket of reserve," she said, for example, by identifyin­g things that bring joy or a sense of accomplish­ment. Even though the pandemic may preclude great joys, Carpenter said, "people can create a constellat­ion of smaller joys, for example, by reading a book, taking a walk or even a long shower. A little goes a longway to relieve the stresses of the day and build up the reserve needed to help you dealwith the cancer."

Noting that many people have found newways to interact with others during the pandemic, "this is all the more important to do in the face of cancer," Carpenter said. "Remember, you’re not just your cancer. You’re a whole person experienci­ng something. Take time to identify your needs and tell people what they are— don’t wait for them to ask."

This advice is especially critical to cancer patients whose disease or treatment has compromise­d their immunity, leaving them especially vulnerable to infection by the coronaviru­s. A friend with chronic lymphoma who must avoid in-person contact with her five young grandchild­ren visits them through a glass door and observes their delight in retrieving the little treats she leaves for them on her porch.

Think, too, of how you’ve faced difficulti­es in the past, "how you’ve adapted to things you previously believed to be unimaginab­ly difficult," Carpenter suggested. Resiliency in the face of cancer during COVID, she said, need not have a limit.

 ?? GRACIA LAM/THE NEWYORK TIMES ??
GRACIA LAM/THE NEWYORK TIMES

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