Abstract 1730P
Background
A constellation of a large attack surface of interconnected devices and cyberimmaturity renders healthcare ripe to cybercrime. These vulnerabilities and their consequences will be magnified by the exponential growth in artificial intelligence. We assess the impact and implications of a cyberattack on a national cancer centre.
Methods
On 14 May 2021 (day 0), the first national healthcare ransomware attack occurred within which all hospitals including Cork University Hospital (CUH) Cancer Centre was implicated. Contingency plans were only present in laboratory services who had previously experience information technology (IT) failures. Departmental handwritten logs of activity and responses for 700 days after the attack were reviewed.
Results
Following the attack, all IT systems were shut down. No hospital cyberattack emergency plan was in place. Within CUH, on day 0, all radiotherapy (RT) treatment stopped, outpatient activity fell by 50%, and elective surgery stopped. Haematology, biochemistry and radiology capacity fell by 90% (daily sample deficit (DSD) 2700 samples), 75% (DSD 2,250 samples), and 90% (100% mammography/PETscan) respectively. Histopathology reporting times doubled (7 to 15 days). or paused IT links. Outsourcing of radiology and radiotherapy (RT) commenced, alternative communication networks (e.g., proton mail; Siilo) were utilised and national conference calls for RT and clinical trials were established. 136 patients had interrupted RT: median gap day 6 days category 1, 10 days for remaining patients. By day 28, e-mail communication was restored. By day 210, reporting and data storage backlogs were cleared and over 2000 computers were checked/replaced by the Irish Army. Notification of patients and staff whose data was compromised is ongoing (day 720).
Conclusions
Cyberattacks have rapid, profound and protracted impacts. While laboratory and diagnostic deficits were readily quantified, the impact of disrupted/delayed care on patient outcomes is less readily quantifiable but likely to be much greater. As criminals and nation states weaponize the internet, cyberawareness and cyberattack plans need to be embedded in healthcare.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
R.J. Keogh: Financial Interests, Other, Travel, Accommodations, Expenses: MSD. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1706P - Time to full approval of novel anticancer medicines granted accelerated approval and implications for reform of the accelerated approval pathway
Presenter: Thomas Hwang
Session: Poster session 23
1707P - Cancer drug prices in the US: Efficacy, innovation, clinical trial evidence, and epidemiology
Presenter: Christoph Michaeli
Session: Poster session 23
1708P - The registration pathways in China for globally developed novel anticancer drugs
Presenter: Da-wei Wu
Session: Poster session 23
1709P - Influence of censoring on conclusions of FDA-approved cancer drugs using the modified time to treatment failure
Presenter: Jonathan Ofer
Session: Poster session 23
1710P - Protocol waivers and consequences on treatment safety and efficacy in the Drug Rediscovery Protocol (DRUP)
Presenter: Laurien Zeverijn
Session: Poster session 23
1711P - The DRUP-like clinical trials family: A distributed European trial network for equitable access to precision medicine
Presenter: Hans Gelderblom
Session: Poster session 23
1712P - Implementation of a molecular pre-screening program (MPP) in a network of public cancer centres for phase I clinical trial (Ph1-CT) candidates: The PREICO program
Presenter: Juan José Soto Castillo
Session: Poster session 23
1713P - Non-inferiority oncology clinical trials in major journals: Purposes, methods and results
Presenter: Rafael Barreto
Session: Poster session 23
1714P - Geographical disparities in access to cancer clinical trials in Korea
Presenter: Sokbom Kang
Session: Poster session 23
1715P - Analysis of the adequacy of control arms in oncology randomized clinical trials published between 2017 and 2021: A meta-research study
Presenter: Alessandro Rossi
Session: Poster session 23