| Literature DB >> 32362368 |
M Collard1, Z Lakkis2, J Loriau3, D Mege4, C Sabbagh5, J H Lefevre1, L Maggiori6.
Abstract
The massive inflow of patients with COVID-19 requiring urgent care has overloaded hospitals in France and impacts the management of other patients. Deferring hospitalization and non-urgent surgeries has become a priority for surgeons today in order to relieve the health care system. It is obviously not simple to reduce emergency surgery without altering the quality of care or leading to a loss of chance for the patient. Acute appendicitis is a very specific situation and the prevalence of this disease leads us to reconsider this particular disease in the context of the COVID-19 crisis. Indeed, while the currently recommended treatment for uncomplicated acute appendicitis is surgical appendectomy, the non-surgical alternative of medical management by antibiotic therapy alone has been widely evaluated by high-quality studies in the literature. Insofar as the main limitation of exclusively medical treatment of uncomplicated acute appendicitis is the risk of recurrent appendicitis, this treatment option represents an alternative of choice to reduce the intra-hospital overload in this context of health crisis. The aim of this work is therefore to provide physicians and surgeons with a practical guide based on a review of the literature on the medical treatment of uncomplicated acute appendicitis in adults, to offer this alternative treatment to the right patients and under good conditions, especially when access to the operating room is limited or impossible.Entities:
Keywords: Acute appendicitis; Antibiotic therapy; Appendectomy; COVID-19; Coronavirus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32362368 PMCID: PMC7181971 DOI: 10.1016/j.jviscsurg.2020.04.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Visc Surg ISSN: 1878-7886 Impact factor: 2.043
Initial and late failures of medical treatment of non-complicated acute appendicitis in prospective studies.
| Study | Initial failure rate | Failure at one year after initial success | Treatment modality in case of suspected recurrence | Overall recurrence-free success rate at one year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eriksson, 1995 | 5% | 37% | Appendectomy: 100% | 60% |
| Styrud, 2006 | 12% | 14% | Appendectomy: 100% | 76% |
| Hansson, 2009 | 9% | 12% | Appendectomy: 80% | 78% |
| Turhan, 2009 | 18% | 10% | Appendectomy: 89% | 75% |
| Vons, 2011 | 12% | 29% | Appendectomy: 100% | 63% |
| Park, 2014 | 8% | 13% | Appendectomy: 98% | 84% |
| Salminen, 2015 | 6% | 23% | Appendectomy: 100% | 73% |
| Allievi, 2017 | 20% | 21% | Appendectomy: 100% | 63% |
Antibiotic therapy regimens for medical treatment alone in non-complicated acute appendicitis.
| Study | Antibiotic therapy regimens | Duration of antibiotic therapy | Expected duration of hospital stay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eriksson, 1995 | IV: Cefotaxime 2 g*BID and Tinidazole 800 mg*QD for two days then Oral: Ofloxacin 200 mg*BID and Tinidazole 500 mg*BID for eight days | 10 days | 2 days |
| Styrud, 2006 | IV: Cefotaxime 2 g*BID and Tinidazole 800 mg*QD for two days then Oral: Ofloxacin 200 mg*BID and Tinidazole 500 mg*BID for ten days | 12 days | 2 days |
| Hansson, 2009 | IV: Cefotaxime 1 g*BID and Metronidazole 1.5 g*QD for one day | 10 days | 1 day |
| Turhan, 2009 | IV: Ampicillin 1 g*QID and Gentamycin 160 mg*QD and Metronidazole 500mg*TID for two days then Oral: (Ampicillin + metronidazole) for eight days | 10 days | 2 days |
| Vons, 2011 | Amoxicillin + clavulanic acid 1 g TID if weight < 90 kg and 1 g QID if weight ≥ 90 kg, oral (or IV if nausea) | 8 days | Return to home as soon as possible starting day 1 |
| Park, 2014 [9] | IV: 2nd generation cephalosporin + Metronidazole | 4 days | 2 days |
| Salminen, 2015 | IV: Ertapenem 1 g QD for three days then Oral: Levofloxacin 500 mg QD and Metronidazole 500 mg TID for seven days | 10 days | 3 days |
| Allievi, 2017 | IV: Piperacillin + Tazobactam 4.5 g* QID (variable duration) or IV: Ertapenem 1 g QD for three days or IV: Ceftriaxone 1 g QD + Metronidazole 500 mg* TID (variable duration) then oral: Amoxicillin + clavulanic acid/1 g* TID for five days | 8 days | 3 days |
Saint-Antoine scale [40].
| Item | Points |
|---|---|
| BMI (body mass index) < 28 kg/m2 | 1 point |
| Leucocyte count < 15,000/μL | 1 point |
| CRP < 3 mg/dL | 1 point |
| No radiological signs of perforation | 1 point |
| Diameter of appendix ≤ 10 mm | 1 point |
Figure 1Algorithm for non-surgical management of non-complicated acute appendicitis in case of hospital saturation. Q1 to Q8 refer to the questions 1 to 8 treated in the manuscript.