Abstract

How to decide the proper time to do laparotomies for acute appendicitis patients is sometimes very difficult, especially in areas with no imaging diagnostic tools. The Alvarado scoring system (ASS) is a convenient and inexpensive decision making tool; however, its accuracy needs to be improved. The decision tree is the most frequently used data mining technology for diagnostic model building. This study used a decision tree to modify the ASS and to prioritize the variables. We collected 532 patients who underwent appendectomy. Patients who had undergone incidental appendectomy were excluded from the study. The decision tree algorithm was constructed with the data mining workbench Clementine version 8.1. It is a top-down algorithm designed to generate a decision tree model with entropy. The algorithm chooses the best decision node with which to separate different classes from empirical data. The Wilcoxon signed rank test, Student t test and chi(2) test were used for statistical analysis. Among the 532 patients recruited into the study, 420 had acute appendicitis and 112 had normal appendix. Women with acute appendicitis were older than their male counterparts (p < 0.001). All patients had right lower quadrant tenderness. The new model was constructed with decision tree technology, and the accuracy of the diagnostic rate was better than that of ASS (p < 0.001). The sensitivity and specificity of the new model were 0.945 and 0.805, respectively. The new model is more convenient and accurate than ASS. Right lower quadrant tenderness is an inclusion criterion for acute appendicitis diagnosis. Migrating pain and neutrophil count > 75% were significant factors for acute appendicitis diagnosis if ASS score < 6. Although the criteria of nausea/vomiting and white blood cell count > 10,000/dL were significantly different between acute appendicitis and normal appendix, there was no significant contribution of entropy change below the "neutrophil count > 75%" nodes in the model. So they were erased from the decision tree model. Further studies need to be conducted to investigate why older women are at higher risk for acute appendicitis.

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