Published in:
01-07-2015
Laparoscopic versus open surgery for complicated appendicitis: a randomized controlled trial to prove safety
Authors:
John-Edwin Thomson, Deirdré Kruger, Christine Jann-Kruger, Akos Kiss, J. A. O. Omoshoro-Jones, Thifheli Luvhengo, Martin Brand
Published in:
Surgical Endoscopy
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Issue 7/2015
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Abstract
Background
To date, no randomized control trial has been performed comparing open appendectomy (OA) to laparoscopic appendectomy (LA) in complicated appendicitis. A systematic review and meta-analysis in 2010 concluded LA is advantageous to OA with less surgical site sepsis in complicated appendicitis; however, the level of evidence is weak (level 3a). The aim of the study was to determine whether LA is safe in the treatment of complicated appendicitis. Primary outcome included all-cause mortality and procedure-related mortality; secondary outcomes included intra-operative duration, rates of wound sepsis and re-intervention, length of hospital stay and re-admission rates.
Methods
One hundred and fourteen patients were randomized prospectively to either OA or LA using a computer-generated blind method. Patients who were either less than 12 years of age, had previous abdominal surgery or were pregnant were excluded. A team of senior surgeons capable of doing both OA and LA performed all procedures.
Results
The intra-operative duration, the rate of wound sepsis, the number of re-operations, the length of hospital stay and the rate of re-admissions between the OA and LA groups did not differ statistically.
Conclusion
Laparoscopic appendectomy is safe in complicated appendicitis. Current Control Trials (ISRCTN92257749)