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Antibiotics-First Versus Surgery for Appendicitis: A US Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial Allowing Outpatient Antibiotic Management
- Talan, David A;
- Saltzman, Darin J;
- Mower, William R;
- Krishnadasan, Anusha;
- Jude, Cecilia M;
- Amii, Ricky;
- DeUgarte, Daniel A;
- Wu, James X;
- Pathmarajah, Kavitha;
- Morim, Ashkan;
- Moran, Gregory J;
- Group, Olive View–UCLA Appendicitis Study;
- Bennion, Robert;
- Schmit, Paul;
- Gibbons, Melinda;
- Hiyama, Darryl;
- Chen, Formosa;
- Cheaito, Ali;
- Brunicardi, F Charles;
- Lee, Steven;
- Dunn, James;
- Flum, David;
- Davidson, Giana;
- Ehlers, Annie;
- Mason, Rodney;
- Abrahamian, Fredrick M;
- Begaz, Tomer;
- Chiem, Alan;
- Diaz, Jorge;
- Dyne, Pamela;
- Hui, Joshua;
- Lovato, Luis;
- Lundberg, Scott;
- Rouhani, Amir;
- Waxman, Mathew;
- McCollough, Maureen;
- Taira, Breena;
- Torrez, Raquel;
- Gonzalez, Eva;
- Sayegh, Christine;
- Seloadji, Paula;
- Quinteros, Noemi;
- Martin, Gabina;
- Salem, Roee;
- Uribe, Lisandra A;
- De La Guerra, Justin A;
- Garrett, Alexander;
- Jeng, Arthur C
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2016.08.446Abstract
Study objective
Randomized trials suggest that nonoperative treatment of uncomplicated appendicitis with antibiotics-first is safe. No trial has evaluated outpatient treatment and no US randomized trial has been conducted, to our knowledge. This pilot study assessed feasibility of a multicenter US study comparing antibiotics-first, including outpatient management, with appendectomy.Methods
Patients aged 5 years or older with uncomplicated appendicitis at 1 US hospital were randomized to appendectomy or intravenous ertapenem greater than or equal to 48 hours and oral cefdinir and metronidazole. Stable antibiotics-first-treated participants older than 13 years could be discharged after greater than or equal to 6-hour emergency department (ED) observation with next-day follow-up. Outcomes included 1-month major complication rate (primary) and hospital duration, pain, disability, quality of life, and hospital charges, and antibiotics-first appendectomy rate.Results
Of 48 eligible patients, 30 (62.5%) consented, of whom 16 (53.3%) were randomized to antibiotics-first and 14 (46.7%) to appendectomy. Median age was 33 years (range 9 to 73 years), median WBC count was 15,000/μL (range 6,200 to 23,100/μL), and median computed tomography appendiceal diameter was 10 mm (range 7 to 18 mm). Of 15 antibiotic-treated adults, 14 (93.3%) were discharged from the ED and all had symptom resolution. At 1 month, major complications occurred in 2 appendectomy participants (14.3%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.8% to 42.8%) and 1 antibiotics-first participant (6.3%; 95% CI 0.2% to 30.2%). Antibiotics-first participants had less total hospital time than appendectomy participants, 16.2 versus 42.1 hours, respectively. Antibiotics-first-treated participants had less pain and disability. During median 12-month follow-up, 2 of 15 antibiotics-first-treated participants (13.3%; 95% CI 3.7% to 37.9%) developed appendicitis and 1 was treated successfully with antibiotics; 1 had appendectomy. No more major complications occurred in either group.Conclusion
A multicenter US trial comparing antibiotics-first to appendectomy, including outpatient management, is feasible to evaluate efficacy and safety.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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