THURSDAY, April 5 (HealthDay News) -- For people suffering from
uncomplicated appendicitis, a course of antibiotics may be just as
good as having the appendix removed, British researchers
report.
The researchers reviewed studies involving hundreds of patients
to determine that treatment with antibiotics could be a safe
alternative to surgery, which has been the so-called "gold
standard" of care for an inflamed appendix since 1889.
"Starting antibiotics when the diagnosis of uncomplicated acute appendicitis is made, with reassessment of the patient, will prevent the need for most appendectomies, reducing patient morbidity," said lead researcher Dr. Dileep Lobo, professor of gastrointestinal surgery at the University of Nottingham and Queen's Medical Centre.
Antibiotics also can shorten a patient's hospital stay, he
added.
Since better diagnostic tools are now available to diagnose
appendicitis, it is safe to adopt a careful "wait, watch and treat"
policy for those who have uncomplicated appendicitis or when the
diagnosis is uncertain, Lobo said.
"In these patients, correct diagnosis rather than an early appendectomy is the key," he said. But, he added, "for patients with clear signs of perforation or peritonitis (an inflammation of the abdominal wall), early appendectomy still remains the gold standard."
For the report, which is published in the April 5 online edition
of
BMJ, Lobo's team did a meta-analysis of four studies in which at total of 900 patients with appendicitis were randomly assigned to surgery or antibiotics.
Among patients treated with antibiotics, 63 percent did not need
any further treatment after a year. In addition, antibiotic use
resulted in 31 percent fewer complications than surgery, the
researchers found.
Among the more than 400 patients treated with antibiotics, 68
had recurrent symptoms. Of those, 13 had serious appendicitis, four
had a normal appendix and three were successfully treated with more
antibiotics, the researchers noted.
The researchers also found no real differences in the length of
hospital stays or the risk of complicated appendicitis between
people treated with antibiotics and those who underwent
surgery.
Dr. Rodney Mason, an associate professor of surgery at the
University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine in Los
Angeles, reported similar findings in his own study in the February
issue of the journal
Surgical Infections. "Antibiotic therapy offers a risk of complications that is significantly less than that of appendectomy," he said.
But patients must be willing to accept the idea that they may
have to return for surgery if symptoms recur, he said.
"Patients must be willing to accept an initial failure and subsequent recurrence rate of about 40 percent in exchange for the possibility of foregoing surgery and its associated risks," Mason said. "Having said that, 60 percent of patients will get by without surgery."
"Conservative treatment with antibiotics seems to do better than appendectomy," said Dr. Olaf Bakker, from the University Medical Center Utrecht in the Netherlands and the author of an accompanying journal editorial.
He noted in his editorial, however, that appendectomy does not
have a lot of complications, while the researchers found that
antibiotic treatment resulted in a 20 percent chance of recurrence
within a year.
"Of these recurrences, 20 percent of patients presented with a perforated [appendix] or gangrenous appendicitis," he said. "It is questionable whether a failure rate of 20 percent within one year is acceptable."
These results therefore should be interpreted with caution, he
said, and appendectomy "will probably remain the treatment for
appendicitis until further studies are done."
One other expert noted that the choice is a complicated one, and
part of that involves the costs of each treatment.
Although antibiotics may be cheaper, if patients need to come
back for an appendectomy after antibiotics have failed, the total
cost might end up being higher, said Dr. Carl Schulman, an
associate professor of surgery at the University of Miami School of
Medicine in Florida.
In addition, doctors influence a patient's decision by what they
say, he added.
"You could say, 'With antibiotics, there is a four-in-five chance that you won't need an operation.' That seems very reasonable," he said. "But you could say, '20 percent of patients do come back after antibiotics and they have to have their appendix out; maybe we should just take out your appendix.'"
The best a patient can do is make an informed choice by asking
questions, Schulman added.
More information
For more on appendicitis, visit the
U.S. National Library of Medicine.