Appendectomy vs. Symptomatic Treatment in Uncomplicated Acute Appendicitis Among Pediatric Patients
- Conditions
- Appendicitis
- Interventions
- Procedure: appendectomy
- Registration Number
- NCT05289713
- Lead Sponsor
- Helsinki University Central Hospital
- Brief Summary
The APPSYPP trial is a randomized national multicenter feasibility superiority pilot study comparing appendectomy with symptomatic treatment in children with imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis. Patients are recruited from all five Finnish university hospitals. Inclusion criteria are: 1) age 7-15 years, 2) imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis (no appendicolith, perforation, abscess, or tumor suspicion), and 3) CRP ≤ 65 mg/l. Patients are randomized to receive emergency appendectomy or symptomatic treatment. In the surgery group, patients undergo laparoscopic appendectomy within 18 hours after randomization. In order to ensure patient safety, symptomatically treated patients are hospitalized for at least 24 hours, and receive intravenous fluids and analgesics according to standard clinical practice. Primary outcome is treatment success at 30 days defined by not fulfilling any of the treatment failure criteria. In the surgery group, treatment failure is defined as normal appendiceal histopathology or any postintervention complication requiring general anesthesia. In the symptomatic treatment group, treatment failure is defined as inability to discharge from hospital without appendectomy within 48 hours after randomization with a finding of histopathologically inflamed appendix, appendectomy during the initial hospital stay due to clinical progression of appendicitis with histopathologically and surgically confirmed complicated acute appendicitis, appendectomy with a histopathological finding of acute appendicitis after hospital discharge, or any complication of appendicitis requiring general anesthesia. Predefined secondary outcomes include later appendectomies, recurrence of histopathologically confirmed appendicitis and associated symptoms, postintervention complications, return to normal daily activities, quality of, resolution of appendicitis in US imagining after 1 month of symptomatic treatment, comparison of US and MRI findings at presentation, and differences in serum biomarkers and fecal microbiota composition.
- Detailed Description
While antibiotic treatment is an effective and safe treatment for most adults and children with imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis, emerging evidence further indicates that antibiotics and symptomatic treatment strategies may have similar efficacy and safety in uncomplicated acute appendicitis among adults. There are no randomized studies comparing appendectomy to symptomatic treatment in children.
The APPSYPP trial is a randomized national multicenter feasibility superiority pilot study comparing appendectomy with symptomatic treatment in children with imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis. Patients are recruited from all five Finnish university hospitals. Inclusion criteria are: 1) age 7-15 years, 2) imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis (no appendicolith, perforation, abscess, or tumor suspicion), and 3) CRP ≤ 65 mg/l. Patients are randomized to receive emergency appendectomy or symptomatic treatment. In the surgery group, patients undergo laparoscopic appendectomy within 18 hours after randomization. In order to ensure patient safety, symptomatically treated patients are hospitalized for at least 24 hours, and receive intravenous fluids and analgesics according to standard clinical practice. Primary outcome is treatment success at 30 days defined by not fulfilling any of the treatment failure criteria. In the surgery group, treatment failure is defined as normal appendiceal histopathology or any postintervention complication requiring general anesthesia. In the symptomatic treatment group, treatment failure is defined as inability to discharge from hospital without appendectomy within 48 hours after randomization with a finding of histopathologically inflamed appendix, appendectomy during the initial hospital stay due to clinical progression of appendicitis with histopathologically and surgically confirmed complicated acute appendicitis, appendectomy with a histopathological finding of acute appendicitis after hospital discharge, or any complication of appendicitis requiring general anesthesia.
The APPSYPP feasibility trial aims to assess the symptomatic treatment in children with imaging-confirmed uncomplicated acute appendicitis and whether this can safely be studied in a larger patient cohort in the future.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 64
- age 7-15 years
- clinical diagnosis of uncomplicated acute appendicitis confirmed by US and/or MRI: adequately visualized appendix with a diameter of 6.1-11.0 mm without evidence of perforation, abscess, appendicolith or tumor suspicion
- CRP ≤ 65 mg/l
- inability to give informed consent
- age under 7 or over 15 years
- antibiotic administration within 14 days prior to enrolment
- any previous treatment for acute appendicitis
- severe nausea and/or vomiting preventing oral fluid intake
- systemic disease potentially compromising the safety of symptomatic treatment of acute appendicitis (e.g. type 2 diabetes, malignancy, immune deficiency, or a medical condition requiring immunosuppressant medication)
- diffuse peritonitis or complicated acute appendicitis at imaging (perforation, abscess, appendicolith or tumor suspicion)
- inadequately visualized appendix
- age and sex adjusted BMI over 27 kg/m2 and no MRI performed
- CRP > 65 mg/l.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Symptomatic treatment appendectomy Symptomatically treated patients are hospitalized for at least 24 hours, and receive intravenous fluids and analgesics according to standard clinical practice. Surgery appendectomy In the surgery group, patients undergo laparoscopic appendectomy within 18 hours after randomization.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Treatment success at 30d follow-up. 30 days Treatment success is defined by not fulfilling any of the following treatment failure criteria.
Treatment failure in the surgery group:
* Normal histopathology of the removed appendix.
* Any complication of acute appendicitis or surgery requiring general anesthesia (GA) within 30 d.
Treatment failure in the symptomatic treatment group:
* Inability to discharge from hospital within 48 h after randomization without appendectomy due to persisting symptoms and unmet discharge criteria with a finding of histopathologically inflamed appendix.
* Appendectomy due to clinical suspicion of progressive appendicitis including increasing pain not responding to the defined non-opioid analgesics during the initial hospital stay with a finding of histopathologically and surgically confirmed complicated acute appendicitis.
* Appendectomy with a histopathologically confirmed acute appendicitis after hospital discharge within 30 d.
* Any complication of AA reiring GA within 30 d.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Recurrent symptoms 1 year The number of emergency department visits or hospitalizations due to symptoms related to appendicitis.
Postintervention complications 1 year Categorized according to Clavien-Dindo classification (Grades I-V).
Recurrent appendicitis 1 year Recurrence of appendicitis (Histopathological diagnosis).
Recovery of normal daily activities 1 year Recovery to normal daily activities, school and sports. Reported in days.
QoL 1 year Quality of life evaluated by PedsQL, a validated questionnaire
Resolution of acute appendicitis 1 month Resolution of acute appendicitis, verified by US imaging.
Comparison of US and MRI in diagnostics 1 month Comparison of US and MRI findings (appendix visibility/normal/uncomplicated/complicated appendicitis) at presentation in the same patient. Percentage (%) of patients with either normal appendix, uncomplicated appendicitis, complicated appendicitis or not visible appendix. Imaging modalities are compared to each other and with histopathological analysis. Whether MRI imaging can improve diagnostics.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Helsinki University Central Hospital
🇫🇮Helsinki, Finland