Scoping review: hotspots for COVID-19 urological research: what is being published and from where?

Liang G. Qu, Marlon Perera, Nathan Lawrentschuk, Rainy Umbas, Laurence Klotz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Purpose: Contemporary, original research should be utilised to inform guidelines in urology relating to the COVID-19 pandemic. This comprehensive review aimed to: identify all up-to-date original publications relating to urology and COVID-19, characterise where publications were from, and outline what topics were investigated. Methods: This review utilised a search strategy that assessed five electronic databases, additional grey literature, and global trial registries. All current published, in-press, and pre-print manuscripts were included. Eligible studies were required to be original research articles of any study design, reporting on COVID-19 or urology, in any of study population, intervention, comparison, or outcomes. Included studies were reported in a narrative synthesis format. Data were summarised according to primary reported outcome topic. A world heatmap was generated to represent where included studies originated from. Results: Of the 6617 search results, 48 studies met final inclusion criteria, including 8 pre-prints and 7 ongoing studies from online registries. These studies originated from ten countries according to first author affiliation. Most studies originated from China (n = 13), followed by Italy (n = 12) and USA (n = 11). Topics of the study included pathophysiological, administrative, and clinical fields: translational (n = 14), COVID-19-related outcomes (n = 5), urology training (n = 4), telemedicine (n = 7), equipment and safety (n = 2), urology in general (n = 4), uro-oncology (n = 3), urolithiasis (n = 1), and kidney transplantation (n = 8). Conclusion: This review has outlined available original research relevant to COVID-19 and urology from the international community. This summary may serve as a guide for future research priorities in this area.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3151-3160
Number of pages10
JournalWorld Journal of Urology
Volume39
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2021

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Kidney transplantation
  • Telemedicine
  • Training
  • Uro-oncology
  • Urology

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