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Extended Antibiotic Course Prior to Interval Appendectomy in Children with Complicated Appendicitis Offers No Significant Advantage.
Surgical Infections 2019 April
BACKGROUND: No consensus exists regarding duration of antibiotic therapy for complicated appendicitis treated with interval appendectomy. We hypothesized that more than two weeks of antibiotic therapy does not decrease complication rates in asymptomatic patients.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective review of all patients with complicated appendicitis treated with interval appendectomy from 2010-2015 was performed. We divided the patients in two groups (group 1, ≤2 weeks of antibiotics; group 2: >2 weeks of antibiotics). Demographics, antibiotic agents, and complications were collected. Pearson χ analysis and Student t-test analysis was performed with significance of p < 0.05.
RESULTS: Total of 158 patients met inclusion criteria (group 1 [47.4%] vs. group 2 [52.5%]). Mean length of stay was 7.5 days. Abscess on admission was 26% (n = 41). The groups were demographically similar. Total complication rate was 39.2% (abscess development, n = 19; re-admissions, n = 16; interval appendectomy <28 days, n = 13; unplanned emergency department visits, n = 7; fistula, n = 4, wound infection/dehiscence, n = 3; and conversion to open surgery, n = 4). All fistulas and conversions occurred in the less than two-week group. Mean course of antibiotics was 4.1 weeks. There was no significant difference in the complication rates based on duration or type of antibiotics (p = 1.0).
CONCLUSION: Treatment with more than two weeks of antibiotic therapy for complicated appendicitis does not confer any clinical benefit prior to interval appendectomy. Complications were not reduced by a prolonged course of antibiotic therapy.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: A retrospective review of all patients with complicated appendicitis treated with interval appendectomy from 2010-2015 was performed. We divided the patients in two groups (group 1, ≤2 weeks of antibiotics; group 2: >2 weeks of antibiotics). Demographics, antibiotic agents, and complications were collected. Pearson χ analysis and Student t-test analysis was performed with significance of p < 0.05.
RESULTS: Total of 158 patients met inclusion criteria (group 1 [47.4%] vs. group 2 [52.5%]). Mean length of stay was 7.5 days. Abscess on admission was 26% (n = 41). The groups were demographically similar. Total complication rate was 39.2% (abscess development, n = 19; re-admissions, n = 16; interval appendectomy <28 days, n = 13; unplanned emergency department visits, n = 7; fistula, n = 4, wound infection/dehiscence, n = 3; and conversion to open surgery, n = 4). All fistulas and conversions occurred in the less than two-week group. Mean course of antibiotics was 4.1 weeks. There was no significant difference in the complication rates based on duration or type of antibiotics (p = 1.0).
CONCLUSION: Treatment with more than two weeks of antibiotic therapy for complicated appendicitis does not confer any clinical benefit prior to interval appendectomy. Complications were not reduced by a prolonged course of antibiotic therapy.
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