ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Endoscopic Retrograde Appendicitis Therapy

The Chinese University of Hong Kong logo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Appendicitis

Treatments

Procedure: Endoscopic retrograde appendicitis therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04281251
CRE-2020.011

Details and patient eligibility

About

This is a prospective pilot study on the efficacy of endoscopic therapy for adult uncomplicated acute appendicitis. In recent years, antibiotics treatment has been a new alternative approach to surgical appendicectomy for acute appendicitis, however, there is a risk of failed antibiotics treatment and chance of recurrent appendicitis.

Endoscopic therapy of acute appendicitis (ERAT) has been recently described that involves colonoscopic insertion of plastic stent and removal of appendicolith. The investigators conduct this pilot study to investigate the feasibility, technical and clinical success rate of endoscopic retrograde appendicitis therapy among adult patients with uncomplicated acute appendicitis. 20 patients would be recruited for the pilot study.

Full description

Acute appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies in adult patients. The lifetime risk of developing acute appendicitis in the United States is 8.6% for males and 6.7% for females. For many decades, surgical appendicectomy is the gold standard of treatment of acute appendicitis. Appendicectomy could be performed in an open manner via a right lower abdominal incision, or more popular nowadays with the laparoscopic approach by placing three abdominal trocars. Earlier studies have identified high treatment success rate with both open and laparoscopic approaches, but adverse events were lower in laparoscopic group. Intra-abdominal abscesses were a potential concern with laparoscopic appendicectomy. In recent few years, antibiotics treatment for acute appendicitis has been a promising management option. By avoid the need of surgery and general anaesthesia, the non-operative approach was associated with a lower morbidity than the surgical approach. The major drawback of antibiotic treatment was the risk of failed primary treatment and subsequent recurrent appendicitis. A recent randomized controlled study demonstrated a primary clinical success treatment at index attack of 94.2%. 72.7% of the patients who received antibiotics alone did not require appendicectomy at 1-year follow-up. While antibiotics therapy could be a safe alternative to surgical therapy, many are still skeptical of the treatment due to the potential high recurrence rate.

Endoscopic therapy of acute appendicitis (Endoscopic retrograde appendicitis therapy, ERAT) was recently described recently in the literature. The technique involves a two-staged procedure with endoscopic plastic stent drainage of appendiceal orifice followed by stent and appendicolith retrieval. These were small case series conducted in China demonstrating technical feasibility and initial clinical success rate of this alternative approach. The technique has not been practiced in most centers across the world. The merit of endoscopic treatment lies in its potential to remove the appendicolith thereby reducing the recurrence rate. It could provide an invaluable treatment option that overcomes the drawback of high recurrence rate with antibiotics alone.

Given that the novel endoscopic technique has not been widely adopted, the investigators plan to conduct this pilot study to investigate the feasibility, technical and clinical success rate of endoscopic retrograde appendicitis therapy among adult patients with uncomplicated acute appendicitis.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria

  1. Adult patients emergency admitted for suspected acute appendicitis
  2. Age 18 - 70
  3. Computed Tomography of the abdomen with contrast confirmed uncomplicated appendicitis, as evidenced by presence of a dilated, thickened wall appendix without perforation, abscess or gangrene.

Exclusion criteria

  1. History of previous appendicitis
  2. Evidence of perforation, abscess or gangrene of appendix on CT scan
  3. Significant paralytic ileus as evidenced by dilated bowel loops on imaging
  4. Evidence of co-existing acute surgical pathologies on the CT scan
  5. Allergic to bowel preparation solution (Polyethylene glycol)
  6. Marked electrolyte abnormalities, significant renal impairment (CrCl <30ml/min)
  7. Coagulopathy (INR >1.5, platelet <50)
  8. Pregnancy, or contraindication to fluoroscopy
  9. Other cases deemed by the examining physician as unsuitable for safe treatment
  10. Refusal to participate

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 1 patient group

ERAT arm
Experimental group
Description:
This is the treatment arm where endoscopic therapy of acute appendicitis would be performed
Treatment:
Procedure: Endoscopic retrograde appendicitis therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems