| Literature DB >> 32156296 |
Paola Fugazzola1, Marco Ceresoli2, Vanni Agnoletti3, Ferdinando Agresta4, Bruno Amato5, Paolo Carcoforo6, Fausto Catena7, Osvaldo Chiara8, Massimo Chiarugi9, Lorenzo Cobianchi10, Federico Coccolini9, Alessandro De Troia6, Salomone Di Saverio11, Andrea Fabbri12, Carlo Feo6, Francesco Gabrielli2, Angela Gurrado13, Angelo Guttadauro2, Leonardo Leone14, Daniele Marrelli15, Luca Petruzzelli16, Nazario Portolani17, Francesco Paolo Prete18, Alessandro Puzziello19, Massimo Sartelli20, Giorgio Soliani6, Mario Testini18, Salvatore Tolone21, Matteo Tomasoni22, Gregorio Tugnoli23, Pierluigi Viale24, Monica Zese6, Offir Ben Ishay25, Yoram Kluger25, Andrew Kirkpatrick26, Luca Ansaloni22.
Abstract
The epidemiology and the outcomes of acute appendicitis in elderly patients are very different from the younger population. Elderly patients with acute appendicitis showed higher mortality, higher perforation rate, lower diagnostic accuracy, longer delay from symptoms onset and admission, higher postoperative complication rate and higher risk of colonic and appendiceal cancer. The aim of the present work was to investigate age-related factors that could influence a different approach, compared to the 2016 WSES Jerusalem guidelines on general population, in terms of diagnosis and management of elderly patient with acute appendicitis. During the XXIX National Congress of the Italian Society of Surgical Pathophysiology (SIFIPAC) held in Cesena (Italy) in May 2019, in collaboration with the Italian Society of Geriatric Surgery (SICG), the World Society of Emergency Surgery (WSES) and the Italian Society of Emergency Medicine (SIMEU), a panel of experts participated to a Consensus Conference where eight panelists presented a number of statements, which were developed for each of the four topics about diagnosis and management of acute appendicitis in elderly patients, formulated according to the GRADE system. The statements were then voted, eventually modified and finally approved by the participants to the Consensus Conference. The current paper is reporting the definitive guidelines statements on each of the following topics: diagnosis, non-operative management, operative management and antibiotic therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Appendectomy; Appendicitis; Elderly; Surgery in elderly
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32156296 PMCID: PMC7063712 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-020-00298-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Fig. 1Voting results
Statements
| Diagnosis | |
| Non-operative management | |
| Operative management | |
| Antibiotic therapy | |
Fig. 2Management algorithm for patients older than 65 years old with suspected AA