Abstract

BackgroundThe evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of nonoperative management is growing. However, the best treatment strategy for acute complicated appendicitis remains controversial. We aimed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of treatment strategies for complicated appendicitis patients. This study sought to determine the most cost-effective strategy from the health care-payer’s perspective.MethodsThe primary outcome was an incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER) using nonoperative management with or without interval laparoscopic appendectomy (ILA) as the intervention compared with operative management with emergency laparoscopic appendectomy (ELA) alone as the control. Model variables were abstracted from a literature review, and from data obtained from the hospital records of Tochigi Medical Center. Cost-effectiveness was evaluated using an ICER. We constructed a Markov model to compare treatment strategies for complicated appendicitis in otherwise-healthy adults, over a time horizon of a single year. Uncertainty surrounding model parameters was assessed via one-way- and probabilistic-sensitivity analyses. Threshold analysis was performed using the willingness-to-pay threshold set at the World Health Organization’s criterion of $107,690.ResultsThree meta-analysis were included in our analysis. Operative management cost $6075 per patient. Nonoperative management with interval laparoscopic appendectomy (ILA) cost $984 more than operative management and produced only 0.005 more QALYs, resulting in an ICER of $182,587. Nonoperative management without ILA cost $235 more than operative management, and also yielded only 0.005 additional QALYs resulting in an ICER of $45,123 per QALY. Probabilistic sensitivity analysis with 1000 draws resulted in average ICER of $172,992 in nonoperative management with ILA and $462,843 in Nonoperative management without ILA. The threshold analysis demonstrated that regardless of willingness-to-pay, nonoperative management without ILA would not be most cost-effective strategy.ConclusionsNonoperative management with ILA and Nonoperative management without ILA were not cost-effective strategies compared with operative management to treat complicated appendicitis. Based on our findings, operative management remains the standard of care and nonoperative management would be reconsidered as a treatment option in complicated appendicitis from economic perspective.

Highlights

  • The evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of nonoperative management is growing

  • Cost-effectiveness analysis Compared with operative management, results showed that nonoperative management with interval laparoscopic appendectomy (ILA) cost $984 more and yielded 0.005393 additional quality- adjusted life years (QALY), resulting in an incremental cost effectiveness ratio (ICER) of $182,587 per QALY

  • In nonoperative management with ILA, the parameter with the greatest influence on ICER was the rate of perioperative complications after emergency laparoscopic appendectomy (ELA) for complicated appendicitis

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Summary

Introduction

The evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of nonoperative management is growing. Patients with complicated appendicitis undergoing immediate surgery might require larger colonic resection and have higher complication risk and longer hospital stay [4] [5] [6]. These patients can be treated with antibiotics with image-guided drainage, as needed, without surgery, in the acute setting. This initial nonoperative management is safe, and planning an interval appendectomy in patients with complicated appendicitis appears successful [7] [8]. A metaanalysis of 61 studies concluded that interval appendectomy may not be necessary in patients who respond to nonoperative management because the pooled risk of recurrent appendicitis was < 10%, and the incidence of malignancy was < 2% [9]

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