Re-assessment of Appendicitis Evaluation During Laparoscopic Appendectomy, Peritoneal Irrigation During Laparoscopic Appendectomy Does the Grade of Contamination Matter?

NCT ID: NCT05075252

Last Updated: 2023-03-22

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Total Enrollment

1067 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-10-01

Study Completion Date

2025-09-30

Brief Summary

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Type: prospective observational multicenter trial. Population of interest: adult patients undergoing laparoscopic appendectomy for acute appendicitis.

Hypothesis : laparoscopic lavage during laparoscopic appendectomy is a practice that should be used in selected patients according to the intraperitoneal grade of contamination and grade of appendicitis. Nonregulated use of laparoscopic lavage cannot be considered superior to suction only considering recent evidence. Few RCT available addressing this issue are available, but any with a high methodological quality.

Aim: The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of laparoscopic lavage during laparoscopic appendectomy on the postoperative incidence of intrabdominal abscesses, stratifying patients in different clusters according to a defined classification considering the intraperitoneal contamination and grade of appendicitis.

Detailed Description

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Introduction: Laparoscopic appendectomy has progressively gained acceptance as the standard of care for acute appendicitis. Focusing on the incidence of postoperative intra-abdominal abscess after a laparoscopic appendectomy, discordant data have been reported ranging from 1.5 to 20%. Besides, evidence advocating advantages from peritoneal irrigation over suction only are lacking. Most studies are burdened by a high level of heterogeneity regarding the severity of the appendicitis and modalities of peritoneal irrigation. One of the main drawbacks is the lack of an accepted classification for different degrees of appendicitis and peritoneal contamination. The aim of the study is to introduce a classification to clarify the relationship between grade of appendicitis, contamination, and postoperative incidence of IAA considering the surgeon's attitude toward irrigation or suction alone. Preoperative, intra-operative, and postoperative predictive factors for infectious complication will also be assessed. This study is meant to be the first Italian multicenter resident-based observational study.

Hypothesis: The driving hypothesis of the investigators study is that there should exist a relationship between different intra-operative treatment protocols (irrigation vs suction alone) and postoperative incidence of IAA. Furthermore, considering various grades of appendicitis and peritoneal contamination, the use of irrigation vs suction alone could lead to different rates of postoperative IAA.

Aim: The aim of this study is to introduce and evaluate a classification for acute appendicitis taking into account the peritoneal contamination to delineate the relationship between grade of appendicitis and postoperative incidence of IAA considering the surgeon's attitude toward irrigation or suction alone.

Primary endpoint:

Relationship among each severity grade of acute appendicitis and postoperative incidence of intra-abdominal abscesses

Secondary endpoint:

Impact of intraperitoneal irrigation or suction alone on the incidence of IAA for each severity grade

Methods:

See the dedicated section for eligibility criterion. Participants will fill an online form reporting all clinical and intra-operative data of each patient who will undergo a laparoscopic appendectomy. All personal information of patients will be removed according to data anonymization.

Data will be reported in accordance with Strengthening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology guidelines (STROBE) for observational studies \[22\].

Residents from each involved center will be responsible for data collection. All forms will be collected in an electronic database by the coordinating residents who will check for data completeness. All residents taking part in the study will be asked to enter eventual missing data.

The incidence of IAA after laparoscopic appendectomy reported in the literature ranges from 1.5 to 20% \[4, 5, 9,10,11\]. Such a wide interval is not negligible when calculating the sample size (n) of the study cohort. Furthermore, some important basic considerations need to be taken into account: appendicitis is the most common acute surgical disease so the baseline population is large and cannot be exactly estimated; the incidence of intra-abdominal abscesses has never been systematically investigated in regard to the severity of appendicitis and contamination. All patients included in the study will be classified into different clusters considering the grade of appendicitis and contamination, lavage vs suction alone, and postoperative incidence of IAA.

Considering all these aspects, sample size for power calculation can be reasonably estimated given a 95% confidence interval with a z-score of 1.96, a 50% standard deviation, and a 0.03 margin of error. This formula does not include the incidence rate of IAA for the aforementioned reasons.

The estimated sample size would be around at least 1067 patients. Data will be collected in a computerized spreadsheet (Microsoft Excel 2016; Microsoft Corporation, Redmond; WA) and analyzed with statistical software (IBM Corp. Released 2017. IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, version 25.0. Armonk, NY).

χ2 test will be assessed to compare categorical variables, and univariate logistic regression will be performed to provide hazard ratios for individual variables, identifying possible predictors of postoperative complication (IAA above all). All significant (p \< 0.05) variables at univariate analysis will be included in a multivariate regression model in order to detect independent risk factors for the outcome and to estimate odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals.

A scoring system will be built according to the results of statistical analysis. The weight of each variable will be addressed based on odds ratio values. To evaluate the accuracy of the score, discrimination and calibration of the model will be explored. The former will be assessed by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, whereas the latter will be investigated with the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit test. Based on the results of the ROC curve analysis, we will proceed to identify different severity grades of acute appendicitis each one related to a specific risk of developing delayed IAA. χ2 test will be assessed to compare categorical variables, and univariate logistic regression will be performed to provide hazard ratios for individual variables, identifying possible predictors of postoperative complication (IAA above all). All significant (p \< 0.05) variables at univariate analysis will be included in a multivariate regression model in order to detect independent risk factors for the outcome and to estimate odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals.

Discussion The observational nature of this study is mandatory to examine and analyze surgeon attitude toward peritoneal contamination related to appendicitis during laparoscopic appendectomy. The optimal study design to address the core matter would be a well-structured RCT to assess the real effect of lavage plus suction versus suction alone on postoperative IAA. There is a lack of methodological strictness in the existent randomized trials due to heterogeneous determination of appendicitis severity and peritoneal contamination.

We feel indispensable to start from identifying different grades of appendicitis, related contamination, and their relationship with postoperative abscesses, considering surgeons' attitude. The core step is to classify each patient and create a score to pick out classes of peri-appendiceal contamination related to different incidence rate of postoperative IAA.

The General Surgery residency program at the University of Milan is based on a large clinical network in which residents are distributed in different hospitals. It is a 5-year program. One hundred thirty residents are involved. The clinical network includes 59 surgical units in 27 hospitals.

This system structure allows great exposure to different surgical scenarios, inside and outside the operating room. The program requires, per year, a minimum of procedures in which the resident has to be involved. From the first to the fifth year, the difficulty of the procedure is increased. To the best of the investigators' knowledge, this is one of the most efficient residency programs in Italy because great attention is dedicated to surgical skills improvement. On the other hand, this program may underestimate the scientific needs and educational growth of residents. This study is resident driven as an incitement to a defined organization for the scientific growth of the University of Milan residents.

During the project start-up phase of this study, an official group of residents of the General Surgery program at the University of Milan has been created. The main aim of this group of young doctors is to try to guarantee to each resident, who is interested, the minimal scientific knowledge and ability to critically understand, ideate, and project a scientific study.

Conditions

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Appendicitis Appendectomy

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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R1

patients affected by acute appendicitis undergoing totally laparoscopic appendectomy

laparoscopic lavage

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

This study aims to investigate the impact of laparoscopic lavage on the incidence of postoperative abscesses stratifying patients on the grade of appendicitis and peritoneal contamination.

Interventions

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laparoscopic lavage

This study aims to investigate the impact of laparoscopic lavage on the incidence of postoperative abscesses stratifying patients on the grade of appendicitis and peritoneal contamination.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Patients between 18 and 69 years old
* Surgical laparoscopic approach for AA
* Intra-operative and histological diagnosis of AA

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients \< 18 years old or \> 69 years old
* Previous appendectomy
* Previous appendicitis treated conservatively
* Open approach for surgery or intra-operative conversion
* Co-existence of other intra-abdominal infections (IAI)
* Patients with immunodeficiency
* Patients treated with steroid, immunosuppressant, or CHT within previous 6 months
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

69 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Niguarda Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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ASST GOM Niguarda

Milan, , Italy

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Italy

Central Contacts

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Stefano Pietro Cioffi, MD

Role: CONTACT

+393386032519

Facility Contacts

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Stefano Pietro Cioffi, MD

Role: primary

+393386032519

References

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Cioffi SPB, Altomare M, Spota A, Granieri S, Cimbanassi S, Chiara O. REsiDENT 1 (Re-assessment of Appendicitis Evaluation during laparoscopic appendectomy: Do we End a Non-standardized Treatment approach and habit?): peritoneal irrigation during laparoscopic appendectomy-does the grade of contamination matter? A prospective multicenter resident-based evaluation of a new classification system. World J Emerg Surg. 2019 May 30;14:25. doi: 10.1186/s13017-019-0243-4. eCollection 2019.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 31164914 (View on PubMed)

Cioffi SPB, Granieri S, Scaravilli L, Molteni M, Altomare M, Spota A, Virdis F, Bini R, Renzi F, Reitano E, Ragozzino R, Gupta S, Chiara O, Cimbanassi S; Resident-1 Research Group. Surgeons' attitudes during laparoscopic appendectomy: do subjective intraoperative assessments affect the choice of peritoneal irrigation? A spin-off analysis from the REsiDENT-1 multicentre prospective observational trial. Surg Endosc. 2023 Jan;37(1):729-740. doi: 10.1007/s00464-022-09674-0. Epub 2022 Oct 28.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 36307601 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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S_26_05_21_5158

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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