Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Raja Isteri Pengiran Anak Saleha Appendicitis Treatment Without Operation - Antibiotic Non-operative Management Strategy Versus Surgery Management Strategy, a Non-Inferiority Randomised Controlled Trial.
The RIPASA score is a Clinical Prediction Rule (CPR) for the diagnosis of acute appendicitis.
Since its inception in 2009, the RIPASA score has been validated in various population in
healthcare institutions around the world and reported significantly higher sensitivity and
specificity when compared to Alvarado score. RIPASA score ranges from 3 to 16.5 with those
having a score of less than 7 having a low probability of acute appendicitis and those with a
score of 7.5 having a high probability of acute appendicitis.
There has been a trend in the past decade on non-operative management of early-uncomplicated
acute appendicitis (EuAA) with antibiotic therapy. This antibiotic non-operative management
strategy (AMS) has been reported to work in children, thus avoiding unnecessary emergency
operation. In adults presenting with early-uncomplicated acute appendicitis, this management
pathway is still uncertain and most randomized controlled trials (RCT) and meta-analysis have
not been able to show significant benefit of AMS over surgery management strategy (SMS),
partly due to variable treatment efficacy, high recurrence rate within a year and a lack of
agreement of whom would constitute a group of EuAA.
The working hypothesis of this study is that RIPASA score as a Clinical Prediction Rule, can
determine a group of patients with a diagnosis of EuAA, based on the range of scores (RIPASA
score 7.5 - 11.5), who will benefit from an AMS rather than SMS, leading to improve patients'
outcomes through a significant reduction in negative appendicectomy rate, shorter length of
hospital stay, reduce post-operative complications and changing physician behavior in
managing this group of patients to an AMS rather than SMS and ultimately financial cost
savings.
The primary specific aim of this study is to compare AMS with SMS in patients with EuAA in a
prospective non-inferiority RCT. Secondary specific aims are to determine the range of RIPASA
score that can define a group of patients with EuAA, step 3 validation of RIPASA score as a
valid CPR and improve patient outcomes in terms of reducing unnecessary negative
appendicectomy rate, hospital stay and complications arising from such surgery, and
ultimately financial cost savings.
Introduction:
Acute appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies, with a lifetime prevalence
approximately 1 in 7. The incidence is 1.5-1.9 per 1000 in a male and female population with
approximately 1.4 times greater in men than in women.
Despite being a common problem, acute appendicitis remains a difficult diagnosis to
establish, particularly in the young, elderly and female of reproductive age. Delay in
surgery may risk appendicular perforation and sepsis. Reduced diagnostic accuracy and early
surgery risk significantly high negative appendicectomy rate of about 20-40%. Diagnostic
accuracy can be further improved by using ultrasonography or computed tomography scan.
However, these modalities are costly and may not easily be available when needed.
Clinical prediction rule (CPR) such as Alvarado score, the modified Alvarado score, and the
RIPASA score have been developed to improve the diagnostic accuracy of acute appendicitis.
Alvarado and Modified Alvarado scores have been reported to have very low sensitivity and
specificity when applied to an Asian population with a completely different ethnic origin and
diet. Thus RIPASA score was developed specifically for an Asian population and have been
reported to have a significantly better sensitivity (98%) and specificity (82%) over the
former two scores. Since 2009, the RIPASA score has undergone broad validation in different
population settings with a different prevalence of acute appendicitis across the world and
reported similarly high sensitivity and specificity.
The standard management of acute appendicitis has remained largely been unchallenged since
the late 19th century, largely because of the belief that if left untreated surgically, acute
uncomplicated appendicitis will progress to perforation and peritonitis with increased
morbidity and mortality. Furthermore current surgical management of acute appendicitis is
associated with an unacceptably high negative appendicectomy rate of about 20-40% and
significant post-operative complications.
Antibiotic non-operative therapy of intra-abdominal sepsis has been accepted as mainstay
therapy for a condition such as diverticulitis. Since 2009, antibiotic non-operative therapy
has been increasingly proposed as an alternative strategy for early uncomplicated acute
appendicitis (EuAA) and has also been reported to be safe and effective in children with
acute appendicitis complicated by perforation, abscess or phlegmon formation.
However, despite multiple randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and meta-analyses, the role of
antibiotics in the management of EuAA in adults remains controversial. Early RCTs have
reported treatment efficacy for antibiotic non-operative management strategy (AMS) of EuAA as
high as 88-91% with a recurrence rate of acute appendicitis at 13-14% at 1-year follow-up.
More recent RCTs comparing AMS versus surgical management strategy (SMS) have not been able
to confirm non-inferiority of AMS over SMS. These later findings were also been supported by
multiple recent meta-analyses. The discrepancies in reported studies are due to a lack of
agreeable definition of EuAA, which was the common recommendation by all the recent
meta-analyses. The NOTA study in 2014 reported using clinical prediction rules such as Acute
Inflammatory Response (AIR) score (mean score of 4.9) and Alvarado score (mean score of 5.2)
to define their group with EuAA, but this was only a prospective cohort study design and the
mean score used were well below the threshold for diagnosing acute appendicitis.
RIPASA Score provides a range of score from 3.0-16.5 for diagnosing acute appendicitis.
RIPASA score less than 7 are considered having a low probability of acute appendicitis and
RIPASA score more than 7.5 are considered high probability of acute appendicitis. Thus it may
be possible to identify a group of patients with EuAA based on their RIPASA score range who
may benefit from AMS.
This study-working hypothesis is that RIPASA score as a CPR can determine a group of patients
with a diagnosis of EuAA, who will benefit from AMS rather than SMS. The primary specific aim
of this study is to confirm the non-inferiority status of AMS over SMS in EuAA. Secondary
specific aims are to determine the range of RIPASA score which can be considered as providing
a firm diagnosis of EuAA which can be management with AMS rather than SMS, step 3 impact
analysis of RIPASA score as a CPR, and improve patient outcomes in terms of reducing
unnecessary negative appendicectomy rate, hospital stay and complications arising from such
surgery, and ultimately financial cost savings.
Methodology:
Trial Design:
This study also known as RIPASA-TWO trial is designed as a single center, open-label,
non-inferiority, prospective RCT to compare 2 management strategies for suspected EuAA, AMS
versus SMS, using RIPASA score to identify the group of patients with EuAA and to monitor the
progression of the disease and guiding surgical decision based on the participants' RIPASA
score.
Population and Study Setting:
The study setting will be based at Raja Isteri Pengiran Anak Saleha (RIPAS) Hospital, a
tertiary referral center. All staffs of the Department of General Surgery (GS) and Accident &
Emergency (A&E) Department at RIPAS Hospital will be brief of the trial design and purpose.
Recruitment:
Patients presenting to A&E Department at RIPAS Hospital with right iliac fossa pain will be
triaged and seen by the Casualty Officer. RIPASA score will be derived. Patients with RIPASA
score between 7.5 to 11.5 and who satisfy the study inclusion and exclusion criteria will be
referred to the on-call surgical medical officer (MO) for recruitment to RIPASA-TWO trial.
Antibiotics will be withheld until patients have been seen by the surgical MO on duty and the
RIPASA score is confirmed. The Surgical MO will inform and explain to the patient and family
of the study and a study information sheet will be provided. Upon written signed consent to
be recruited for the RIPASA-TWO trial, patients will be randomized to either arms - AMS or
SMS.
Allocation concealment:
A variable block randomization sequence of 4,6 and 8 will be used to allocate participants to
either AMS or SMS. A web-based program will be used and accessed via secured username and
password, to obtain randomization allocation for the recruited participants. Once the
randomization allocation code has been given, the surgical MO will allocate the treatment
according to the randomized arm. Recruitment will be stratified to two RIPASA score range,
7.5-9.5 and 10.0-11.5.
Study Protocol:
The surgical MO/SMO will login into the randomization allocation software to acquire the
randomization allocation arm and code. The patient will then be admitted to GS inpatient
wards. Patients randomized to AMS arm will receive the allocated antibiotic treatment. Those
randomized to SMS arm will receive the usual Departmental antibiotic policy of preoperative
antibiotics prior to appendicectomy.
For patients in the AMS arm, the RIPASA score will be repeated to monitor the progression of
the patient's condition after 24 hours. If RIPASA score remains stable or decreasing, the
patient will continue on the allocated intravenous (iv) antibiotic treatment. If RIPASA score
is increasing but remain below 11.5, the team looking after the patient can consider ordering
further investigations such as ultrasound or CT scan, but patients will continue at this
point on the antibiotic. If the RIPASA score increases to above 12, the surgeon can consider
appendicectomy.
For patients in the AMS arm who have not cross over to surgery, they will continue with iv
antibiotics for 48 hours and if symptoms improved with decreasing RIPASA score to below 7.5,
the antibiotic will be changed to oral route and the patient monitored regularly. If RIPASA
score goes below 5, the patient can be considered for discharge and follow-up in 1 week in
the clinic with an oral antibiotic for a total of 7 days.
For patient randomized to the SMS arm, patients will undergo appendicectomy, unless their
repeated RIPASA score decreases to below 7.5 or if their symptoms improved. For these
patients, they will remain on iv antibiotics and will be changed to oral route after 48
hours. If RIPASA score goes below 5, the patient can be considered for discharge and
follow-up in 1 week in the clinic with an oral antibiotic for a total of 7 days.
Antibiotic:
Intravenous Amikacin 15mg/kg/day divided over 3 doses for 48 hours will be the antibiotic of
choice for RIPASA-TWO trial and is based on the microbial antibiotic sensitivity from pus
swab taken for all appendicectomy from the previous year (2016). After 48 hours, this will be
converted to oral ciprofloxacin 500mg bd for 7 days. For patients allocated to SMS arm, the
Department antibiotic policy is for a preoperative antibiotic combination of intravenous
Cefuroxime 1.5g TDS and 500mg metronidazole TDS.
Statistical methods:
Sample size calculation:
According to Chong et al, the reported negative appendicectomy rate based on the RIPASA score
was 14.7%. Hence this 14.7% can be considered as surgical treatment failure due to an
unnecessary operation and the surgical treatment efficacy is about 85.3%.
The non-inferiority margin for RIPASA-TWO trial will be set based on this surgical treatment
failure rate of 14.7%. Using the FDA-approved non-inferiority margin of 50% reduction in
efficacy or 50% increase in failure rate will give AMS an acceptable failure rate of 22%.
Thus a treatment failure for AMS between 14-22% will be considered as confirmation of
non-inferiority. A treatment failure of less than 14% will be considered as superiority.
Hence based on a difference in treatment efficacy rate of 7% (22% vs 14%), with a sample size
powered at 80% at 5% significance, the sample size needed to show non-inferiority is 91 in
each group. Assuming a dropout rate of 25%, the total number of patients needed to be
recruited is 228 patients, based on a 1:1 recruitment.
All statistical analysis will be performed using SPSS statistical program. Categorical data
will be presented using frequencies and percentages. Continuous data will be presented as
mean ± SD. All analysis will be conducted based on intention-to-treat principle and
per-protocol analysis. Statistical analysis for categorical data will be carried out using
Chi Square exact test. Differences between groups with normally distributed variables will be
tested using independent sample t-test. Variables with no normal distribution will be tested
using Wann-Whitney test. Non-inferiority for AMS will be tested using one-sided Wald tests
with an α level of 0.05.
Duration of Study:
Based on the previous study, the recruitment of 200 consecutive patients with acute
appendicitis, took over 8 months. Half of this group had RIPASA score from 7.5 to 11.5. Thus
for a sample size of 228 for the RIPASA-TWO trial, the expected recruitment time is about 19
months. Hence the study will be expected to complete within 2 years.
Interim Analysis:
An interim analysis will be conducted at 2-time points. For changes to antimicrobial
sensitivity, the interim analysis will be conducted at every 6 months and any changes will be
discussed with the Data Safety Monitoring Board for proposed changes to the antibiotic
regime. The main study interim analysis will be conducted at 1-year post recruitment to
assess safety efficacy of the trial to ensure that not too many patients are developing
complicated acute appendicitis in the AMS arm.
Ethical Consideration:
Ethics approval for the study has been granted by the Medical and Health Research and Ethics
Committee based in RIPAS Hospital.
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