Age‐Dependent Decline in Tonsillectomy and Adenoidectomy During the
COVID
‐19 Pandemic in Japan: A Nationwide Longitudinal Analysis of
NDB
Open Data
Nayu Yokoyama, Masao Noda, Masamitsu Kono, Masakazu Hamamoto, Mari Shimada, Hirotaka Hara, Makoto Ito, Manabu Komori ABSTRACT
Objective
To evaluate whether the decline in tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Japan was age‐dependent and to examine trends in postoperative hemostasis activity using nationwide claims data.
Methods
We conducted a nationwide longitudinal descriptive study using National Database Open Data from fiscal years (FY) 2015–2023. Annual procedure counts were extracted for tonsillectomy (K377‐1), adenoidectomy (K370), and postoperative hemostasis after tonsil surgery (K367‐a). Pandemic phases were defined as pre‐COVID (FY2015–FY2019), COVID onset (FY2020), COVID ongoing (FY2021–FY2022), and recovery (FY2023). Age‐stratified analyses were performed for tonsillectomy. The postoperative hemostasis rate was calculated per 1000 tonsillectomies.
Results
Tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy volumes increased through FY2019, reaching 73,577 and 14,910 cases, respectively, before declining sharply in FY2020 to 47,097 and 7018. The reduction in tonsillectomy was strongly age‐dependent and greatest among children aged 0–14 years, with a 48.9% decrease from FY2019 to FY2020 (29,340–14,992), whereas the decline among adults aged ≥ 60 years was smaller at 12.5% (5433–4752). Surgical volumes remained suppressed during FY2021–FY2022 and partially recovered in FY2023 but did not return to prepandemic peak levels. The absolute number of postoperative hemostasis procedures remained relatively stable over time; however, the hemostasis rate increased during the pandemic period because tonsillectomy volume declined.
Conclusion
The pandemic‐associated reduction in tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy in Japan was disproportionately concentrated in pediatric patients. Despite reduced surgical volume, the absolute postoperative hemostasis activity was relatively preserved. These findings provide nationwide evidence of age‐dependent disruption in elective otolaryngologic procedures during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
Level of Evidence
4.