JAMA: Among patients with uncomplicated appendicitis, antibiotic treatment
did not meet a prespecified level of effectiveness compared with
appendectomy, although most patients who received antibiotic therapy did
not require an appendectomy, and for those who did, they did not
experience significant complications, according to a study in the June
16 issue of JAMA.
Appendectomy has been the standard treatment for acute appendicitis
for over a century. More than 300,000 of these procedures are performed
annually in the United States. Although appendectomy is generally well
tolerated, it is a major surgical intervention and can be associated
with postoperative complications. An increasing amount of evidence
supports the use of antibiotics instead of surgery for treating patients
with uncomplicated acute appendicitis, according to background
information in the article.
Paulina Salminen, M.D., Ph.D., of Turku University Hospital, Turku,
Finland, and colleagues randomly assigned 530 patients with
uncomplicated acute appendicitis (confirmed by a computed tomography
[CT] scan) to receive antibiotic therapy for 10 days or a standard
appendectomy. The researchers tested the hypothesis that antibiotic
treatment was noninferior (not worse than) to appendectomy, and assumed
that there would be sufficient benefits from avoiding surgery and that a
24 percent failure rate in the antibiotic group would be acceptable.
Of the 273 patients randomized to the surgical group, all but 1
underwent successful appendectomy, resulting in a success rate of 99.6
percent. Of the 256 patients available for 1-year follow-up in the
antibiotic group, 186 (72.7 percent) did not require appendectomy.
Seventy patients (27.3 percent) in the antibiotic group underwent
surgical intervention within 1 year of initial presentation for
appendicitis. The intention-to-treat analysis yielded a difference in
treatment efficacy between groups of -27.0 percent. Given the
prespecified noninferiority margin of 24 percent, the researchers were
unable to demonstrate noninferiority of antibiotic treatment relative to
surgery.
There were no intra-abdominal abscesses or other major complications
associated with delayed appendectomy inpatients assigned to antibiotic
treatment.
“Antibiotic treatment of patients with uncomplicated acute
appendicitis was not shown to be noninferior to appendectomy for
uncomplicated appendicitis within the first year of observation
following initial presentation of appendicitis. Nevertheless, the
majority (73 percent) of patients with uncomplicated acute appendicitis
were successfully treated with antibiotics,” the authors write. “These
results suggest that patients with CT-proven uncomplicated acute
appendicitis should be able to make an informed decision between
antibiotic treatment and appendectomy. Future studies should focus both
on early identification of complicated acute appendicitis patients
needing surgery and to prospectively evaluate the optimal use of
antibiotic treatment in patients with uncomplicated acute appendicitis.”
(doi:10.1001/jama.2015.6154; Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com)