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About
Around 30% of appendectomies are performed for complicated acute appendicitis (CAA, i.e. cases with perforated appendicitis, extraluminal fecaliths, abscesses, or local or generalized peritonitis). The treatment of these complicated forms involves the following steps: initiation of antibiotic treatment at the time of the diagnosis, appendectomy and post-operative antibiotic therapy that continues for 3 days for localized forms of CAA and for 5 days for generalized peritonitis (according to the guidelines issued by the French Society for Anaesthesia and Critical Care Medicine (SFAR)). The results of a Cochrane meta-analysis published in 2005 suggested that the post-operative infection rate was lower in patients having receiving antibiotic therapy after surgery for AA. When only cases of CAA were considered, the difference was no longer significant. However, it should be noted that the studies included in the meta-analysis are now rather old (published before 1995, with open procedures) and no longer provide valid data for answering this question because most appendectomies (80%) are now performed using laparoscopy. Furthermore, a recent cohort study compared a short (3-day) course of antibiotics with a long course (at least 5 days) in patients with CAA having undergone laparoscopic or open appendectomy. There was no significant intergroup difference in the post-operative complication rate. One can thus legitimately question whether post-operative antibiotic therapy is required after laparoscopic appendectomy for CAA.
The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the impact of the absence of post-operative antibiotic therapy on the organ space surgical site infection (SSI) rate in patients presenting with CAA (other than cases of generalized peritonitis) by comparing a group of patients having undergone a conventional strategy of post-operative antibiotic therapy for three days after appendectomy for CAA (the control group) with a group of patients having received a post-operative placebo for three days after appendectomy for CAA (the experimental group). The primary endpoint will be evaluated at one month after randomization.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Pre-operative exclusion criteria:
Patients with cardiac valvulopathy
Immunodepressed patients
Diabetic patients
Patients who have received an antibiotic treatment within 3 months before the surgery (and having a potential impact on the intestinal flora)
Related to the diagnosis: other diseases (Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, treatment with an immunosuppressive therapy).
Related to the severity of the appendicitis:
A Saint-Antoine score of 4 or 5 (non-complicated acute appendicitis)
Severe sepsis, septic shock, generalized peritonitis
Related to the treatment:
Related to the patient
Per-operative exclusion criteria (related to the severity of appendicitis):
In order to assess the reproducibility of the inclusion criteria in the various centres and to avoid variations due to the lack of an official definition for localized peritonitis, all centres will receive a video tutorial on localized peritonitis before the start of the study.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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1,476 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Jean-Marc Regimbeau, PD; Charles Sabbagh, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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