Predictive Factors to Distinguish Between Patients With Noncomplicated Appendicitis and Those With Complicated Appendicitis
Article information
Abstract
Purpose
Recently, randomized controlled trials have reported that conservative therapy can be a treatment option in patients with noncomplicated appendicitis. However, preoperative diagnosis of noncomplicated appendicitis is difficult. In this study, we determined predictive factors to distinguish patients with noncomplicated appendicitis from those with complicated appendicitis.
Methods
A total of 351 patients who underwent surgical treatment for acute appendicitis from January 2011 to December 2012 were included in this study. We classified patients into noncomplicated or complicated appendicitis groups based on the findings of abdominal computed tomography and pathology. We performed a retrospective analysis to find factors that could be used to discriminate between noncomplicated and complicated appendicitis.
Results
The mean age of the patients in the complicated appendicitis group (54.5 years) was higher than that of the patients in the noncomplicated appendicitis group (40.2 years) (P < 0.001), but the male-to-female ratios were similar. In the univariate analysis, the appendicocecal junction's diameter, appendiceal maximal diameter, appendiceal wall enhancement, periappendiceal fat infiltration, ascites, abscesses, neutrophil proportion, C-reactive protein (CRP), aspartate aminotransferase, and total bilirubin were statistically significant factors. However, in the multivariate analysis, the appendiceal maximal diameter (P = 0.018; odds ratio [OR], 1.129), periappendiceal fat infiltration (P = 0.025; OR, 5.778), ascites (P = 0.038; OR, 2.902), and CRP (P < 0.001; OR, 1.368) were statistically significant.
Conclusion
Several factors can be used to distinguish between noncomplicated and complicated appendicitis. Using these factors, we could more accurately distinguish patients with noncomplicated appendicitis from those with complicated appendicitis.
INTRODUCTION
Acute appendicitis is a common disease with a lifetime risk of 7% to 8% in the United States [1]. Since Fitz [2]'s study published in 1886, an early appendectomy has been accepted as the best treatment for acute appendicitis. Although surgical treatment is well tolerated by most patients, it is associated with a risk of postoperative complications occurring in about 2% to 23% of the patients [34]. Additionally, several studies have reported that 3% of the patients who underwent an appendectomy with or without laparoscopy were readmitted for mechanical obstruction related to a postoperative complication [56].
Three previous randomized controlled trials reported that the one-year cure rate for patients with noncomplicated appendicitis who were treated with antibiotics was 74%-87% and that conservative therapy could be a treatment option for patients with acute appendicitis [789]. Recently, a randomized controlled trial by Salminen et al. [10] reported that antibiotic treatment for noncomplicated appendicitis was inferior to surgical treatment. These studies tried to use conservative therapy to treat patients with noncomplicated appendicitis, but not patients with complicated appendicitis. However, the preoperative diagnosis of patients with noncomplicated appendicitis was challenging. In this study, we attempted to determine the factors that could be used to distinguish patients with complicated appendicitis using preoperative laboratory data, computed tomography (CT) findings, and postoperative pathology findings.
METHODS
The study subjects were 351 patients who had undergone surgical treatment for acute appendicitis between January 2011 and December 2012 at Eulji University Hospital. Inclusion criteria were age older than 18 years and diagnosis based on a CT scan. We excluded patients who were age younger than 18 years old because three previous randomized controlled trials had used adult patients (age > 18 years) [789]. Other exclusion criteria were pregnancy and inflammatory bowel disease combined with an appendiceal neoplasm. A retrospective analysis was done by reviewing the medical records of the included patients. Patient gender, age, preoperative laboratory markers (white blood cell [WBC], neutrophil proportion, C-reactive protein [CRP], total bilirubin, aspartate aminotransferase [AST], and alanine aminotransferase [ALT]), and abdominal CT findings (appendiceal maximal diameter, appendicocecal junction's diameter, appendiceal wall enhancement, periappendiceal fat infiltration, appendicolith, abscesses, and ascites) were recorded. All patients were classified into two groups (noncomplicated appendicitis vs. complicated appendicitis). Patients with appendicitis with perforation or gangrenous changes on pathology or periappendiceal abscess on operative findings were classified as having complicated appendicitis. If the postoperative pathologic finding was a normal appendix or simple appendicitis without complication, the patients were classified as having noncomplicated appendicitis.
We performed statistical analysis using PASW Statistics ver. 18.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). The chi-square test was used to check for differences between proportions. The Student t-test was used for comparisons of continuous variables between groups. The sensitivities, the specificities, and the odds ratios (ORs) were calculated for the factors that discriminated between the noncomplicated and the complicated appendicitis groups. A P-value of ≤0.05 was used to indicate statistical significance.
RESULTS
Patient characteristics
Of the 351 patients, 240 (69%) were diagnosed with simple appendicitis, 85 patients (24%) were diagnosed with complicated appendicitis, and 26 patients (7%) were diagnosed with a normal appendix. The negative appendectomy rate was 7%. The mean age was 40.2 years (18 to 87 years) for the patients with noncomplicated appendicitis and 54.5 years (23 to 91 years) for those with complicated appendicitis. The mean age of the patients in the complicated appendicitis group was significantly higher than that of those in the noncomplicated appendicitis group (P < 0.001). Of the patients, 169 were male and 182 were female. The male-to-female ratios were similar in the two groups. However, the number of females with a negative appendectomy was double that of males with a negative appendectomy group. The mean hospital stay was 4.25 days (standard deviation [SD], ±1.5) and 7.52 days (SD, ±3.9) for the noncomplicated and the complicated appendicitis groups, respectively (Table 1).
CT findings
The mean appendicocecal junction's diameters (P < 0.001) and the appendiceal maximal diameters (P < 0.001) were significantly higher in the complicated appendicitis group compared with the noncomplicated appendicitis group. Appendiceal wall enhancement (P = 0.01), periappendiceal fat infiltration (P < 0.001), ascites (P < 0.001) and abscesses (P < 0.001) were detected with a significantly higher frequency in the complicated appendicitis group (Table 2).
Laboratory findings
The neutrophil proportion (P = 0.004) and the CRP (P < 0.001), total bilirubin (P < 0.001), and AST levels (P = 0.049) were significantly higher in the complicated appendicitis group compared with the noncomplicated appendicitis group. No significant differences in ALT levels (P = 0.308) and mean WBCs (P = 0.014) were seen between the two groups (P = 0.308) (Table 3).
Factors that discriminate between the noncomplicated and the complicated groups
In the univariate analysis, the appendicocecal junction's diameter, appendiceal maximal diameter, appendiceal wall enhancement, periappendiceal fat infiltration, ascites, abscesses, neutrophil proportion, and CRP, AST, and total bilirubin levels were significantly different between the noncomplicated and the complicated groups. However, in the multivariate analysis, a reverse stepwise logistic regression analysis of the data comparing the noncomplicated and the complicated appendicitis groups demonstrated that the appendiceal maximal diameter (P = 0.018; OR, 1.129), periappendiceal fat infiltration (P = 0.025; OR, 5.778), ascites (P = 0.038; OR, 2.902), and CRP level (P < 0.001; OR, 1.368) were statistically significant factors. The sensitivities of periappendiceal fat infiltration, appendiceal maximal diameter, ascites, and CRP level were 0.94, 0.73, 0.27, and 0.78, respectively. The specificities of ascites, appendiceal maximal diameter, periappendiceal fat infiltration, and CRP level were 0.95, 0.53, 0.30, and 0.90, respectively (Table 4).
Scoring system
In this study, through analysis of preoperative lab data, abdominal CT scans, and postoperative pathology findings, we attempted to provide a diagnostic criterion that could distinguish patients with noncomplicated appendicitis from those with complicated appendicitis. The adopted variables were the appendiceal maximal diameter (>10 mm), periappendiceal fat infiltration, and ascites on CT findings and CRP (>5 mg/dL) (Table 5). One point was assigned to each variable, adding up to a total of four points. The mean score for the complicated appendicitis group (2.63 ± 0.87 points) was significantly higher than that for the noncomplicated appendicitis group (1.17 ± 0.85 points) (P = 0.459). The area under the curve of the receiver operating characteristics curve was shown to be 0.870 (Fig. 1). If we adopted a score of two to diagnose complicated appendicitis, that score had a sensitivity of 0.89 and a specificity of 0.68.
DISCUSSION
Conservative therapy as a treatment for patients with acute appendicitis started after Coldrey [11]'s study in 1959 on 471 patients with acute appendicitis who had received antibiotics as a single treatment. Since then, three different randomized controlled trials, which were performed by Hasson et al. [7], Styrud et al. [8], and Vonns et al. [9], respectively, demonstrated that treatment with antibiotics could be as safe and effective as an appendectomy for patients with noncomplicated appendicitis. However, the recent randomized controlled trial of Salminen et al. [10] reported that the 1-year cure rates for an appendectomy and antibiotic treatment were 99.6% and 72.3%, respectively, but they failed to prove that surgical treatment was superior to conservative therapy for patients with noncomplicated appendicitis. Antibiotic treatment for patients with noncomplicated appendicitis was still a subject prolific of controversy, but the effort to distinguish noncomplicated appendicitis from complicated appendicitis was meaningful [12]. Two studies, which were performed by Vonns et al. [9] and Saminen et al. [10], respectively, gave CT-based criteria to diagnose complicated appendicitis. Styrud et al. [8] used laboratory criteria to distinguish noncomplicated appendicitis from complicated appendicitis.
In this study, we analyzed both the preoperative laboratory data and CT scans and found factors that could be used to distinguish between patients with noncomplicated and those with complicated appendicitis. In the multivariate analysis, appendiceal maximal diameter (>10 mm), periappendiceal fat infiltration, ascites, and CRP level (>5 mg/dL) were significantly different between the noncomplicated appendicitis and the complicated appendicitis groups. Eleven patients who were diagnosed with complicated appendicitis had four predictive factors. However, no patient in the noncomplicated appendicitis group had four predictive factors (Table 6).
Before CT was invented, the diagnosis of acute appendicitis was based on symptoms, signs, and laboratory data. The utility of a CT scan in cases of acute appendicitis enabled high accuracy in early diagnosis and reduced morbidity attributed to perforation. It had a high sensitivity (0.99) and specificity (0.95) [13]. The appendiceal maximal diameter (>7 mm) and periappendiceal fat infiltration were important diagnostic findings of acute appendicitis [1415]. However, the distinction between non-complicated and complicated appendicitis remained difficult, even with CT scans [1617]. Vonns et al. [9] used CT-based criteria to diagnose complicated appendicitis (extra luminal gas, periappendiceal fluid, disseminated intraperitoneal fluid, and appendix diameter >15 mm). A total of 119 patients underwent surgical treatment for suspected noncomplicated appendicitis. However, 21 patients (18%) were diagnosed with complicated appendicitis after surgery. CT alone was not enough to distinguish between noncomplicated and complicated appendicitis [9]. In our study, we found that appendiceal maximal diameter (>10 mm), periappendiceal fat infiltration, and ascites on CT scans were highly associated with complicated appendicitis. The presence of periappendiceal fat infiltration had a high sensitivity (0.94), and ascites had a high specificity (0.95).
Recently, one meta-analysis reported that procalcitonin and CRP levels and WBC could be predictive factors that distinguish between noncomplicated and complicated appendicitis [18]. Also, in a study by Noh et al. [19], WBC and CRP and bilirubin levels were useful clinical markers in the diagnosis of complicated appendicitis. A study by Zhao et al. [20] reported that hyperfibrinogenemia might be useful as a predictive factor for appendiceal perforation. Several studies reported that hyperbilirubinemia (>1.0 mg/dL) and CRP level (>5 mg/dL) were statistically significant markers of perforation in patients with acute appendicitis [2122]. Furthermore, one study reported that WBC and CRP level were associated with postoperative complications. When WBC > 16,500/µL and CRP level > 3.1 mg/dL, complications increased six times [23]. In our study, leukocytosis, hyperbilirubinemia, and CRP elevation were significantly different between the noncomplicated and the complicated appendicitis groups in the univariate analysis. However, in the multivariate analysis, CRP level (>5 mg/mL) was the only significant factor.
Recently, Atema et al. [12] made a scoring system based on clinical and imaging features to distinguish noncomplicated from complicated appendicitis. The age, body temperature, duration of symptoms, WBC, CRP level, extraluminal free air on imaging, periappendiceal fluid on imaging, and appendicolith on imaging were included. The sensitivity and the specificity were 0.96 and 0.45, respectively [12]. In our scoring system, the appendiceal maximal diameter (>10 mm), periappendiceal fat infiltration and ascites on CT findings and CRP level (>5 mg/dL) were included. The sensitivity and the specificity were 0.89 and 0.68, respectively (Table 5). Furthermore, this score had a high sensitivity and specificity compared with the score based on only the appendiceal maximal diameter (sensitivity, 0.73; specificity, 0.53), only periappendiceal fat infiltration (sensitivity, 0.94; specificity, 0.30), only ascites (sensitivity, 0.27; specificity, 0.95), and only the CRP level (sensitivity, 0.78; specificity, 0.90) as predictive factors of complicated appendicitis.
An appendectomy is well tolerated by most patients. However, it is associated with a risk of a negative appendectomy and surgical wound infection. In this study, we performed an abdominal CT on all patients to diagnose acute appendicitis. However, the negative appendectomy rate was 7%. In a recent study, the negative appendectomy rate was 15% to 25%. This rate could be as high as 40% in female patients [242526]. In our hospital, the negative appendectomy rate in females has been twice that in males. Several studies have reported the rate of surgical wound infection to be 5%-30% [2728]. In this study, we had 42 complications. Surgical site infection and ileus were found in 33 (9%) and 7 of the cases (2%); intra-abdominal abscesses were observed in two patients.
This study had several limitations. Firstly, this was a retrospective study. In our hospital, patients with acute appendicitis undergo emergency surgery. Hence, an operation delay may lead to a mismatch between the preoperative state and the postoperative diagnosis. Therefore, a follow-up randomized controlled study is necessary.
In conclusion, in this study, the appendiceal maximal diameter, periappendiceal fat infiltration, ascites, and CRP level were factors that were statistically different between the noncomplicated and the complicated appendicitis groups. Using these factors, we could more accurately distinguish patients with noncomplicated appendicitis from those with complicated appendicitis patients.
Notes
CONFLICT OF INTEREST: No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.