Abstract

BackgroundApproximately 30% of appendectomies are for complicated acute appendicitis (CAA). With laparoscopy, the main post-operative complication is deep abscesses (12% of cases of CAA, versus 4% for open surgery). A recent cohort study compared short and long courses of postoperative antibiotic therapy in patients with CAA. There was no significant intergroup difference in the post-operative complication rate (12% of organ/space surgical site infection (SSI)). Moreover, antibiotic therapy is increasingly less indicated for other situations (non-complicated appendicitis, post-operative course of cholecystitis, perianal abscess), calling into question whether post-operative antibiotic therapy is required after laparoscopic appendectomy for CAA.Methods/designThis study is a prospective, multicenter, parallel-group, randomized (1:1), double-blinded, placebo-controlled, phase III non-inferiority study with blind evaluation of the primary efficacy criterion. The primary objective is to evaluate the impact of the absence of post-operative antibiotic therapy on the organ/space surgical site infection (SSI) rate in patients presenting with CAA (other than in cases of generalized peritonitis). Patients in the experimental group will receive at least one dose of preoperative and perioperative antibiotic therapy (2 g ceftriaxone by intravenous injection every 24 h up to the operation) and metronidazole (500 mg by intravenous injection every 8 h up to the operation) and, in the post-operative period, a placebo for ceftriaxone (2 g/24 h in one intravenous injection) and a placebo for metronidazole (1500 mg/24 h in three intravenous injections, for 3 days). In the control group, patients will receive at least one dose of preoperative and perioperative antibiotic therapy (2 g ceftriaxone by intravenous injection every 24 h up to the operation) and metronidazole (500 mg by intravenous injection every 8 h up to the operation) and, in the post-operative period, antibiotic therapy (ceftriaxone 2 g/24 h and metronidazole 1500 mg/24 h for 3 days). In the event of allergy to ceftriaxone, it will be replaced by levofloxacin (500 mg/24 h in one intravenous injection, for 3 days). The expected organ space SSI rate is 12% in the population of patients with CAA operated on by laparoscopy. With a non-inferiority margin of 5%, a two-sided alpha risk of 5%, a beta risk of 20%, and a loss-to-follow-up rate of 10%, the calculated sample size is 1476 included patients, i.e., 738 per group. Due to three interim analyses at 10%, 25%, and 50% of the planned sample size, the total sample size increases to 1494 patients (747 per arm).Trial registrationEthical authorization by the Comité de Protection des Personnes and the Agence Nationale de Sécurité du Médicament: ID-RCB 2017-00334-59. Registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03688295) on 28 September 2018.

Highlights

  • 30% of appendectomies are for complicated acute appendicitis (CAA)

  • In a recent report on a randomized, controlled trial in children, St Peter et al defined complicated appendicitis as appendicitis with a hole in the appendix or with fecaliths; they excluded abscesses and local peritonitis from the definition, because the latter conditions were surprisingly associated with a lower rate of post-operative complications than the former (14% vs 18%) [8]

  • We found a concordance between surgeons in 85% of cases for the definition of a CAA and the type of CAA and two quadrants was the best cut-off between localized and generalized peritonitis by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis [10]

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Summary

Introduction

30% of appendectomies are for complicated acute appendicitis (CAA). A recent cohort study compared short and long courses of postoperative antibiotic therapy in patients with CAA. Antibiotic therapy is increasingly less indicated for other situations (non-complicated appendicitis, post-operative course of cholecystitis, perianal abscess), calling into question whether post-operative antibiotic therapy is required after laparoscopic appendectomy for CAA. 30% of these cases are complicated acute appendicitis (CAA; defined as perforated appendicitis, extraluminal fecaliths, an abscess, or local or generalized peritonitis) [2]. The results of a recent national cohort study suggest that complicated and uncomplicated appendicitis follow different epidemiological trends over time; the incidence of complicated appendicitis has increased slowly but steadily, whereas non-perforated appendicitis has followed a U-shaped curve. The researchers concluded that complicated and uncomplicated appendicitis were two different diseases, with non-parallel courses and non-parallel management [5,6,7]

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