The Lancet Regional Health. Western Pacific (Dec 2020)

The impact of a national COVID-19 lockdown on acute coronary syndrome hospitalisations in New Zealand (ANZACS-QI 55)

  • Daniel ZL. Chan,
  • Ralph AH. Stewart,
  • Andrew J. Kerr,
  • Bridget Dicker,
  • Campbell V. Kyle,
  • Philip D. Adamson,
  • Gerry Devlin,
  • John Edmond,
  • Seif El-Jack,
  • John M. Elliott,
  • Nick Fisher,
  • Charmaine Flynn,
  • Mildred Lee,
  • Yi-Wen (Becky) Liao,
  • Maxine Rhodes,
  • Tony Scott,
  • Tony Smith,
  • Martin K. Stiles,
  • Andrew H. Swain,
  • Verity F. Todd,
  • Mark WI. Webster,
  • Michael JA. Williams,
  • Harvey D. White,
  • Jithendra B. Somaratne

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
p. 100056

Abstract

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Background: Countries with a high incidence of coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) reported reduced hospitalisations for acute coronary syndromes (ACS) during the pandemic. This study describes the impact of a nationwide lockdown on ACS hospitalisations in New Zealand (NZ), a country with a low incidence of COVID-19. Methods: All patients admitted to a NZ Hospital with ACS who underwent coronary angiography in the All NZ ACS Quality Improvement registry during the lockdown (23 March – 26 April 2020) were compared with equivalent weeks in 2015–2019. Ambulance attendances and regional community troponin-I testing were compared for lockdown and non-lockdown (1 July 2019 to 16 February 2020) periods. Findings: Hospitalisation for ACS was lower during the 5-week lockdown (105 vs. 146 per-week, rate ratio 0•72 [95% CI 0•61–0•83], p = 0.003). This was explained by fewer admissions for non-ST-segment elevation ACS (NSTE-ACS; p = 0•002) but not ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI; p = 0•31). Patient characteristics and in-hospital mortality were similar. For STEMI, door-to-balloon times were similar (70 vs. 72 min, p = 0•52). For NSTE-ACS, there was an increase in percutaneous revascularisation (59% vs. 49%, p<0•001) and reduction in surgical revascularisation (9% vs. 15%, p = 0•005). There were fewer ambulance attendances for cardiac arrests (98 vs. 110 per-week, p = 0•04) but no difference for suspected ACS (408 vs. 420 per-week, p = 0•44). Community troponin testing was lower throughout the lockdown (182 vs. 394 per-week, p<0•001). Interpretation: Despite the low incidence of COVID-19, there was a nationwide decrease in ACS hospitalisations during the lockdown. These findings have important implications for future pandemic planning. Funding: The ANZACS-QI registry receives funding from the New Zealand Ministry of Health.

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