State of the Art Review: Evidence based management of acute appendicitis

Authors

  • Sivesh Kamarajah
  • Michael El Boghdady St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London
  • Theophilus Anyomih 2. NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery, Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TH, UK
  • Jared Wohlgemut 3. Department of General Surgery, University Hospital Wishaw, NHS Lanarkshire, Scotland
  • Aneel Bhangu 2. NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery, Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TH, UK

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62463/surgery.45

Keywords:

appendicitis; management

Abstract

Introduction: Even though acute appendicitis is the world’s most common emergency general surgical operation, it remains under-researcher with wide variations in care. The aim of this review was to present current evidence on the management of acute appendicitis, focusing on risk assessment, diagnostic modalities, treatment strategies, and special considerations for specific patient populations.

 

Methods: The writing group conducted a modified Delphi to prioritise topic areas for inclusion in this review. Consensus was achieved when each topic had >70% for either important or strongly important. Scoping reviews of current and grey literature were conducted to identify relevant evidence, focussing on new publications in the last 5 years (2019-2024).

 

Results: Validated risk scoring systems, such as the Adult Appendicitis Score and the AIRS score, aid in identifying low-risk patients suitable for ambulatory management, while imaging modalities, including CT scans and ultrasound, play a pivotal role in confirming diagnosis and guiding treatment decisions. The review highlights the efficacy of surgical intervention versus antibiotic therapy, emphasising the importance of shared decision-making and individualised treatment plans. Tailored care strategies are needed for elderly patients, pregnant women, and those with appendiceal neoplasms whilst strategies for optimising antibiotic stewardship, minimising negative appendectomy rates, and enhancing postoperative care will provide the best evidence-based care.

 

Discussion: This review provides evidence-based practices can be integrated into routine clinical care and ongoing education for frontline clinicians. The practice recommendations are designed to be evidence based and can be tailored depending on local resources. These should form the basis of future educational packages and surgical training programmes.

 

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Published

12-04-2024

How to Cite

Kamarajah, S., El Boghdady, M., Anyomih, T., Wohlgemut, J., & Bhangu, A. (2024). State of the Art Review: Evidence based management of acute appendicitis. Impact Surgery, 1(2), 35–40. https://doi.org/10.62463/surgery.45