key: cord-0885960-e1b590iv authors: Emile, Sameh Hany; Hamid, Hytham K. S.; Khan, Sualeh Muslim; Davis, George N. title: Rate of Application and Outcome of Non-operative Management of Acute Appendicitis in the Setting of COVID-19: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis date: 2021-03-26 journal: J Gastrointest Surg DOI: 10.1007/s11605-021-04988-1 sha: ed56cfa87b92f49e62659fd496b47a148e3757fe doc_id: 885960 cord_uid: e1b590iv BACKGROUND: Non-operative management (NOM) of acute appendicitis has been assessed in several studies before COVID-19 pandemic. This systematic review aimed to assess the extent of adoption, efficacy, and safety of NOM of acute appendicitis in the setting of COVID-19. METHODS: This was a PRISMA-compliant systematic review of the literature. Electronic databases and Google Scholar were queried for studies that applied NOM of acute appendicitis during COVID-19. The main outcome measures were the rates of NOM application during the pandemic as compared to the pre-pandemic period, failure and complication rates of NOM. Failure was defined as the need for appendectomy during NOM and complications included development of appendicular mass or abscess. RESULTS: Fourteen studies (2140 patients) were included. The male to female ratio was 1.44:1 and median age was 34. Nine hundred fifty-nine (44.8%) patients had a trial of NOM. The weighted mean rate of NOM application was 50.1% (95%CI: 29.8–70.5%). The application of NOM during the pandemic was significantly more likely than its application before COVID-19 (OR = 6.7, p < 0.001). The weight mean failure rate of NOM was 16.4% (95%CI: 9.4–23.4). NOM failure was more likely in children and patients with complicated appendicitis. The weighted mean complication rate after NOM was 4.5% (95%CI: 1.4–7.7). NOM had significantly lower odds for complications than appendectomy (OR = 0.36, p = 0.03). There was no mortality after application of NOM. CONCLUSION: NOM of acute appendicitis in the setting of COVID-19 may be a safe, short-term alternative to surgery with acceptably low failure and complication rates. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11605-021-04988-1. Acute appendicitis is the most common abdominal emergency that accounts for thousands of emergency department admissions every year. 1 Appendectomy is the gold standard treatment for uncomplicated acute appendicitis. However, recently there has been a growing trend for non-operative management (NOM) of acute appendicitis with antibiotics as an alternative to appendectomy. 2 Sameh Emile and Hytham Hamid contributed equally to this work and are considered co-first authors. Proponents of NOM of acute appendicitis advocate this line of treatment as it preserves the immune function of the appendix that may represent an essential component of gut immunity. 3 In addition, NOM avoids the adverse effects of surgery that include the risk of organ injury, surgical site infection (SSI), and abdominal adhesions. 4 On the other hand, opponents of NOM emphasize that appendectomy is the definitive treatment of uncomplicated appendicitis because the treatment success of NOM is 18% lower than surgery. 5 According to the collective evidence available, 2 the index admission treatment failure and the rate of recurrence of symptoms within 1 year after NOM of acute appendicitis were 8.5% and 19.2%, respectively. As coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) struck the world hard with millions of infected people across the world, the surgical practice has been likewise compromised. Millions of elective surgical procedures have been canceled, increasing the ultimate burden on healthcare services and hospitals. Even the practice of emergency surgery has dramatically changed during the current pandemic. 6 However, acute appendicitis remains a surgical priority and does not quarantine. 7 Owing to the current circumstances, surgeons thought that NOM of acute appendicitis can be a safer alternative to surgery, in order to reduce the exposure of patients to the risk of contracting COVID-19 and the possible adverse effects of surgery on the immune system that may increase the incidence of pulmonary complications in patients with perioperative SARS-COV-2. 8 The present systematic review aimed to assess the extent of adoption, efficacy, and safety of NOM as a main treatment strategy for acute appendicitis during COVID-19 pandemic and how it has altered the outcomes of acute appendicitis. The protocol of this systematic review was registered a priori in the international prospective register of systematic reviews (Prospero) with special identifier CRD42020222126. This systematic review is reported in compliance with the screening guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) (Fig. 1 ). 9 A systematic literature search for the studies that assessed the role of NOM of acute appendicitis in the setting of COVID-19 pandemic was performed on November 2020, by three independent investigators (S.E., S.K., H.H.). Electronic databases including PubMed, Scopus, EMBASE, and Web of Science were queried using the following keywords: "COVID-19," "COVID19," "Coronavirus disease," "SARS-COV-2," "Pandemic," "appendicitis," "appendix," "treatment," "management," "non-operative," "conservative," and "antibiotics." In addition, the following medical subject headings (MeSH) terms were included in the literature search: (appendicitis), , and (conservative treatment). A parallel internetbased search using Google Scholar service was performed to increase the sensitivity of the search process. A detailed overview of the literature search is shown in Appendix S1. To improve the yield of the search process, we activated the PubMed function "related articles" to search for other relevant studies and hand-searched the reference section of each study retrieved. The studies were initially filtered by title and abstract, then subsequently screened by full-text. The full-text of the selected articles was reviewed to check for eligibility. Studies deemed eligible for inclusion had to include at least five patients who underwent NOM of acute appendicitis in the setting of COVID-19. Single-arm case series or cohort studies and comparative studies that compared the outcome of NOM with appendectomy were included. The outcomes assessed by the studies were the rate of application of NOM of appendicitis during COVID-19 as compared to the pre-COVID-19 period, failure and complication rates of NOM. In order to increase the level of evidence and reporting of data, only the studies that were published in full-text in peerreviewed journals were selected whereas non-reviewed preprints and conference abstracts without full-text articles were not eligible for inclusion. We excluded animal studies, irrelevant articles, editorials, case reports entailing less than five patients, reviews, and meta-analyses. Only articles published in English were included to this review. The methodological quality of the studies included was appraised by two authors (S.E. and H.H.) in an independent manner. The tool used for quality assessment was the methodological index for non-randomized studies (MINORS). 10 The MINORS tool can be used for assessment of both single-arm and comparative studies. The maximum scores for single-arm and comparative studies are 16 and 24, respectively. Low risk of bias is indicated by a score ≥ 12 for singlearm studies and ≥ 20 for comparative studies. Discrepancies in interpretation of the results were resolved by consensus and adjudication by a third reviewer (G.D.). The full-text of the included studies was reviewed by two authors (S.E. and H.H.) and the following data points were extracted into excel spread sheets: The primary outcomes of this systematic review were the rate of application of NOM of appendicitis during COVID-19 as compared to the pre-COVID-19 period and failure of NOM. Failure of NOM was defined as the need for appendectomy either within the index admission or after discharge for increasing or persistent symptoms or development of serious sequel warranting surgery such as perforation. Secondary outcomes were the complication rate of NOM as compared to that of appendectomy, length of hospital stay, readmission rate, mortality, and the rate of negative appendectomy. Complications included development of appendicular mass for which NOM was still applied and did not warrant surgery or development of appendicular abscess which required US or CT-guided drainage without the need for surgery. Definitions of the study outcomes are shown in Appendix S2. We assessed publication bias among the studies by establishing a funnel plot of the standard error of the rates of application and failure of NOM against the application and failure rates reported in the studies reviewed. Absence of publication bias was confirmed by symmetry of the funnel plot and presence of 95% of dots representing the studies near the straight vertical line in the plot. Further assessment of publication bias was made using Egger's regression test. We used SPSS version 25 (IBM, Chicago, USA) to analyze the data. Continuous variables were expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD), or median and normal range. Categorical variables were expressed as numbers and proportions. p values less than 0.05 were considered significant. An open source, cross-platform meta-analysis software "openMeta[Analyst]™" version 12.11.14 was used for conducting a meta-analysis of the outcome of NOM of acute appendicitis. Using random-effect meta-analysis model, we calculated the weighted mean rates of application, failure, and complications of NOM. Statistical heterogeneity was assessed by the p value of the inconsistency (I 2 ) statistics. Heterogeneity was considered low if I 2 < 25% and high if I 2 > 75%. We applied a random-effect meta-regression model, weighing the studies by their within-study variance and the degree of heterogeneity to determine the risk factors of failure of NOM. The inter-study heterogeneity was investigated as related to differences in patients' age, sex, complicated appendicitis, region of the study, and number of centers participating. The statistical significance of each examined variable was examined using slope regression coefficient (SE) which is the estimated increase in the log odds of the outcome per unit increase in the value of the exposure, 95%CI, and p value. This systematic review included 14 studies 11-24 published in 2020. Five studies were based in the UK, three in USA, two in China, and one in Ireland, Nepal, Israel, and India. All studies were cohort, eight of which were retrospective analysis of data and six were prospective studies. Four studies were multicentric and ten were single-center studies. The review entailed 2140 patients with acute appendicitis with a male to female ratio of 1.44:1 and median age of 34 (range, 10-44) years. The diagnosis of acute appendicitis was based on clinical examination and adjunct radiologic examination by ultrasound or CT scanning. Among the 14 studies included, 10 of which had follow-up of 30 days, four had less than 30 days, and none exceeded 30 days of follow-up. Therefore, the median follow-up duration across the studies was 30 (range, 7-30) days. According to the quality assessment, there were 11 studies of high risk of bias and three of low risk of bias. The median MINORS score was 17.5 (range, 12-20) (Table 1) . 20 used a combination of ceftriaxone-metronidazole. The rate of application of NOM varied by country as it ranged from 38.9 to 100% in the studies conducted in the UK, 10-100% in USA, and 10-29.3% in China whereas it was 69.2% in India, 74% in Nepal, and 7.8% in Israel. The median rate of NOM application in the Western countries (USA, UK, Ireland) was 54.2% versus 29.3% in the Eastern countries (India, China, Nepal). When compared to similar time periods before the onset of COVID-19, the application of NOM of acute appendicitis during the pandemic was significantly more likely than its application before COVID-19 (OR = 6.7, 95%CI: 2.2-20.2, p < 0.001, I 2 = 89.3%) ( Table 2 , Fig. 2 ). The rate of increased application of NOM during COVID-19 compared to before the onset of the pandemic ranged from 6.5 to 100%. Fig. 3 ). The indications for appendectomy included ongoing or increasing symptoms in seven studies and development of complicated appendicitis in six studies. Three studies entailing 28 patients did not report failure of NOM. The rate of NOM failure varied according to the patient population. Twelve studies that included adult population reported NOM failure in 60 (10.4%) out of 578 patients whereas two studies comprising pediatric population reported failure of NOM in 111 (29.1%) out of 381 patients (OR = 3.5, 95%CI: 2.5-5, p < 0.0001). The rate of NOM failure also differed according to the rate of application of NOM in each study. Seven studies (553 patients) that had a NOM rate > 50% reported NOM failure in 83 (15%) patients as compared to seven studies (406 patients) with lower NOM rates that reported failure in 88 (21.7%) patients (p = 0.009). In seven studies including 575 patients who had NOM, there were 94 (16.3%) patients with complicated appendicitis ( Table 3 ). The weighted mean NOM failure rate across the studies that included complicated appendicitis was 21.8% (95%CI: 10.7-32.9, I 2 = 90.3%). Six studies including 746 patients reported complications of NOM in 30 (4%) patients. The weighted mean complication rate after NOM was 4.5% (95%CI: 1.4-7.7, I 2 = 70.5%) (Fig. 4) . Complications included intra-abdominal collection (abscess) and appendicular mass. The weighted mean 30day readmission rate after NOM was 10% (95%CI: 3.8-16.1, I 2 = 66%). The application of NOM was not associated with any mortality in the studies. A total of 1181 patients underwent upfront appendectomy without a trial of NOM. According to eight studies that reported the approach of appendectomy, 631 (57.8%) of 1092 patients underwent laparoscopic appendectomy whereas the remaining 42.2% had open appendectomy (Table 4) . Ninety-four (7.9%) patients developed postoperative complications that included intra-abdominal collection (abscess) (n = 39; 3.3%), wound dehiscence (n = 12; 1%), SSI (n = 2; 0.17%), ileus (n = 3; 0.25%), pneumonia (n = 2; 0.17%), small bowel obstruction (n = 2; 0.17%), acute kidney injury (n = 1; 0.08%), and deep vein thrombosis of lower limbs (n = 1; 0.08%). The weighted mean complication rate of appendectomy was 9.8% (95%CI: 4.8-14.9, I 2 = 83.2%). Twelve (1.9%) patients required conversion to open surgery and eight (0.6%) needed reoperation. Three studies including 769 patients reported negative appendectomy in 50 (6.5%) patients. NOM had significantly lower odds for complications than appendectomy, (OR = 0.36, 95%CI: 0.14-0.93, p = 0.03, I 2 = 57.9%) (Fig. 5) . The median hospital stay of NOM was 2 days (range: 22.5 h-5.2 days), shorter than after appendectomy (3 days, range: 17 h-3 days). The study by Verma et al. 17 compared failure of NOM in the COVID-19 era (11/63) and before COVID-19 (2/28) and there was no significant difference in failure rates between Two studies 15, 22 reported on the outcomes of NOM in patients with COVID-19. Overall, seven patients with COVID-19 were treated initially with NOM, with a failure rate of 43% at discharge. None of these patients died or developed recurrent appendicitis at 30 days. The funnel plots of the rates of application and failure of NOM in the studies were symmetrical with more than 95% of studies present near the vertical midline, denoting absence of publication bias (Fig. 6) . p values of Egger's regression were > 0.05 for both analyses (p = 0.88 for NOM application and p = 0.37 for NOM failure) confirming the absence of significant publication bias. Over the past decade several controlled studies and metaanalyses 2, 5 have assessed the outcome of NOM of acute appendicitis. As the current crisis of COVID-19 has unfolded, NOM of appendicitis has been increasingly used and advocated. The present systematic review aimed to assess the rate of Considering the increased risks associated with surgical intervention during the pandemic, surgical societies have advocated an initial trial of NOM for acute appendicitis based on the surgeons' judgment and patient condition. 25, 26 Ever since, NOM has been adopted by many hospitals around the world as the primary treatment approach for acute appendicitis. This was reflected by the findings of this meta-analysis as the application of NOM during COVID-19 was seven times more likely to be implemented in comparison to similar time periods before the onset of the pandemic. The rate of adoption of NOM varied in relation to geographic factors. It was notable that the median application rate of NOM in the studies conducted in Western countries exceeded 50% whereas it was less than 30% in Eastern countries, namely China. While the reasons of this difference are unclear, it may be attributed to cultural and demographic differences between the two groups. The weighted mean rate of NOM failure was 16%, much lower than the failure rates reported in previous meta-analyses published before COVID-19 which ranged from 28-37%. 2, 5, 27 This is quite reasonable since the studies included in the present meta-analysis assessed only the 30-day outcome of NOM as compared to 12 months of follow-up in previous meta-analyses. The application of NOM during the pandemic can be challenging since recent reports highlighted a more complicated course and higher risk of perforation of acute appendicitis during the pandemic. 28 This observation is probably attributed to an increased time interval between the onset of symptoms and admission and decreased patients' willingness to receive in-hospital treatment. 23 As a consequence, a significant proportion of patients with acute appendicitis may not meet the criteria for NOM and the question remains whether NOM can offer an effective alternative to surgery in patients with acute appendicitis during the pandemic. On exploring the possible risk factors of NOM failure, we noted that children and patients with complicated appendicitis were more amenable to experience failure of NOM. NOM failure rate in the studies that included pediatric population was almost three times that of the studies involving mainly adults. This may highlight the different criteria for NOM application between children and adults as has been reported previously. 29 In contradiction to our findings, a previous meta-analysis of NOM of acute uncomplicated appendicitis in children before CVOID-19 revealed a success rate of 90%. 30 This discrepancy may be attributed to the delayed presentation of patients and inclusion of complicated appendicitis in the studies that reported on NOM efficacy in children during the pandemic. 15, 21 Individual studies 13, 16, 17 compared the outcome of NOM during and before COVID-19 and no significant difference in the failure, complication, and 30-day readmission rates was found. Although these were single-center experiences, they may have an implication that the adoption of NOM as a main treatment strategy of acute appendicitis during the pandemic was not associated with a compromise of the short-term efficacy of NOM. To further assess the overall safety of NOM during the pandemic, we compared its outcome with that of upfront appendectomy in the same time period. NOM was found to be associated with significantly lower odds of developing complications of treatment as compared to appendectomy (4.5% vs 9.8%). Furthermore, the median hospital stay of NOM was 1 day shorter than surgery which would be associated with less nosocomial exposure to the virus and less costs. The costs of treatment of acute appendicitis during COVID-19 was assessed by Khanal et al. 20 who found the successful application of NOM to be associated with a cost benefit of 100 US dollars. NOM might be the optimal strategy in patients with acute appendicitis who are SARS-CoV-2 positive to avoid progression of the disease and development of pulmonary complications which can occur in up to 51% of patients after surgery. 8 This review entailed seven COVID-19 positive patients who received NOM of acute appendicitis, yet 43% of whom experienced failure of treatment. This higher failure rate, as compared to the average weighted failure of the meta-analysis, may imply a possible impact of COVID-19 on the body response to NOM. Although not directly relevant to the main purpose of this review, we noticed that the outcomes of upfront appendectomy during COVID-19 were not particularly different to those reported in the pre-COVID19 literature. The conversion and complication rates of appendectomy were similar to those reported in previous studies. 31 The percentage of laparoscopic appendectomy (58%) was slightly lower than that reported in high-income countries (67.7%). 32 However, this indicated that laparoscopic appendectomy remained a viable option despite the concerns of possible spread of the virus in the aerosol generated during laparoscopy which led many surgeons to abandon laparoscopy at the take-off of the pandemic. 33, 34 This meta-analysis has a number of limitations. Firstly, all data were derived from cohort and case-series studies, most of which were retrospective with no available randomized trials. Secondly, the comparison between NOM and upfront appendectomy should be interpreted with caution because the surgery group entailed more patients with complicated and perforated appendicitis. Finally, the results of this metaanalysis represent the short-term outcome of NOM with no assessment of recurrent appendicitis in patients with initially successful NOM. Conclusions NOM of acute appendicitis in the setting of COVID-19 may be a safe, short-term alternative to surgery with acceptably low failure and complication rates. Failure of NOM was more likely in children and patients with complicated appendicitis, thus further assessment and careful decision-making is crucial in these patients. The online version contains supplementary material available at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-021-04988-1. Author Contribution Sameh Emile designed the study, collected and analyzed data, and wrote the manuscript. Hytham Hamid participated in the study conception, collection and interpretation of data, and drafting and revision of the manuscript. Sualeh Khan participated in the study design, data collection, and critical revision of the manuscript. 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