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International Society of Surgery (ISS)
Société Internationale de Chirurgie (SIC)
Integrated Societies: IATSIC | IASMEN | BSI | ISDS
PROSPECTIVE VALIDATION OF THE APPEND CLINICAL PREDICTION RULE FOR APPENDICITIS: A COHORT STUDY
malsh87@hotmail.com
 
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Abstract Title
PROSPECTIVE VALIDATION OF THE APPEND CLINICAL PREDICTION RULE FOR APPENDICITIS: A COHORT STUDY
Author Details
No. of Authors
5
Including the presenting author
Author 1
Malsha Kularatna malsh87@hotmail.com Middlemore hospital General surgery Auckland New Zealand *
Author 2
Lisa Chung lisa.chung@gmail.com Middlemore hospital General surgery Auckland New Zealand
Author 3
Christin Coomarasamy cristin.coomarasamy@middlemore.co.nz Middlemore hospital Auckland university Auckland New Zealand
Author 4
John McCall john.mccall@otago.ac.nz University of Otago General surgery Dunedin New Zealand
Author 5
Andrew MacCormick Andrew.Maccormick@middlemore.co.nz University of Auckland Middlemore hospital Auckland New Zealand
Author 6
Author 7
Author 8
Author 9
Author 10
Author 11
Author 12
Presenting Author Name
Malsha Kularatna
Presenting Author Email
malsh87@hotmail.com
Presenting Author Country
New Zealand
Abstract
Abstract type
Oral or Poster
Introduction *
Right iliac fossa (RIF) pain is a common referral to general surgery as acute appendicitis is one of the most common underlying diagnoses. The clinical diagnosis of appendicitis continues to challenge clinicians. Clinical prediction rules (CPRs) are one method used to improve diagnostic accuracy and reduce negative appendicectomy rates. The APPEND score is a novel CPR that was developed at Middlemore Hospital. We aimed to prospectively evaluate the performance of the APPEND CPR within a pathway dedicated to the management of RIF pain.
Material & Method *
A comparative cohort study of the clinical pathway incorporating the APPEND CPR pain was performed from January to July 2016. This was compared to the retrospective cohort used to develop the APPEND CPR. The primary end point was negative appendicectomy rate.
Results *
The negative appendicectomy rate in the prospective cohort was 9.2% (95% CI: 5.3%, 13.2%) compared to 19.8% (CI 16.2, 23.4%) in the retrospective cohort that did not use the APPEND CPR. After adjusting for multiple variables, the odds ratio of a negative appendicectomy was 2.33 times higher (95%CI;1.26, 4.3,Pvalue 0.007) in the retrospective cohort compared to the prospective cohort. An APPEND score of >5 was 87 % specific for ruling in appendicitis (PPV 94%) and a score of <1 was 100% sensitive in ruling out appendicitis (NPV 100%).
Conclusion *
In a comparative cohort study of an RIF pain pathway incorporating the APPEND CPR, the rate of negative appendicectomy showed a significant reduction by more than 50%.
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Category
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1 General Topics organized by ISS/SIC
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1.03 General Surgery
Submission Status
Withdrawn
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239
Abstract Prizes
Eligible for the BSI Free Paper Prize
No
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript conforming to the format of orignial articles in the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Grassi Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Kitajima Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
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