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Acute Appendicitis

Tundra lists 11 Acute Appendicitis clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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RECRUITING

NCT07496723

Comparison of Diagnostic Methods in Patients Operated for Suspected Appendicitis

Acute appendicitis is one of the most common surgical emergencies, but diagnostic uncertainty may still lead to unnecessary appendectomy in some patients. This prospective observational study aims to evaluate the diagnostic performance of computed tomography (CT) reporting and the Appendicitis Inflammatory Response (AIR) score in adult patients undergoing appendectomy for suspected acute appendicitis. The primary objective is to determine the negative appendectomy rate based on final histopathology. Secondary objectives are to assess the agreement between AIR score, CT findings, intraoperative severity grading, and pathology results, and to explore diagnostic performance across patient subgroups. No study-specific intervention beyond routine clinical care will be performed.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-01

1 state

Acute Appendicitis
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT07492329

Antibiotics vs Surgery in Acute Appendicitis

The aim of this study is to identify clinical, laboratory, and imaging parameters that can predict the most appropriate treatment strategy in patients diagnosed with acute appendicitis. Although appendectomy remains the gold standard treatment, selected patients may be successfully treated with antibiotic therapy. Therefore, determining which patients are more likely to benefit from surgical treatment and which may be managed with antibiotics represents an important clinical challenge. This study is designed as a single-center prospective observational study. Patients aged 18 years and older who are diagnosed with acute appendicitis between 2024 and 2025 will be included. Demographic characteristics, diagnostic modalities, laboratory parameters, clinical scoring systems (Ohmann score and Alvarado score), imaging findings, and treatment modality (antibiotic therapy or appendectomy) will be prospectively recorded. Patients treated with antibiotics will be followed to determine whether appendectomy becomes necessary later and to evaluate the time interval between diagnosis and surgery. Patients with other causes of acute abdomen or those with incomplete clinical data will be excluded from the study. The primary aim of the study is to determine parameters that can predict treatment selection and clinical outcomes. Sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values of the evaluated parameters will be calculated to assess their usefulness in guiding treatment decisions.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-25

Acute Appendicitis
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07479849

TACTILE : Validation of a Teleconsultation-Based Predictive Score for the Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis in Children Using Artificial Intelligence Methods

Acute appendicitis is the most common abdominal surgical emergency in children and a frequent cause of pediatric emergency department visits. Diagnosis may be challenging due to variable clinical presentations and overlapping symptoms with other causes of abdominal pain. The increasing use of telemedicine further limits access to direct physical examination. This study aims to evaluate and validate a predictive clinical score designed for teleconsultation to estimate the probability of acute appendicitis in children. The score is based on symptom history and simple clinical signs assessed remotely with the assistance of a parenton a 10 item checklist. During an emergency visit for acute abdominal pain, voluntary children aged 3 to 16 years and their parents will be guided by a medical student through the checklist in conditions simulating a teleconsultation. The score will be recorded for research purposes only and will not influence clinical management. All participants will subsequently undergo standard medical evaluation and management by an emergency physician, who will independently assess the probability of acute appendicitis based on routine clinical practice. The diagnostic performance of the simulated teleconsultation will then be evaluated using advanced statistical and artificial intelligence-based methods and compared with standard in-person pediatric emergency consultation.

Gender: All

Ages: 3 Years - 16 Years

Updated: 2026-03-18

Acute Appendicitis
RECRUITING

NCT07008092

Prostaglandin-E Urinary Metabolite (PGE-M) as a Predictor of Acute Appendicitis in Children

Diagnosing acute appendicitis in children remains a clinical challenge, with delayed or incorrect diagnosis potentially leading to serious complications or unnecessary surgery. Prostaglandin E urinary metabolites (PGE-M) have been found elevated in various inflammatory conditions, but their diagnostic value in pediatric appendicitis is not well established. This study aims to assess the potential of PGE-M as a biomarker for acute appendicitis in children. The study will be conducted over 12 months and will include 100 children aged 5 to 17 years presenting with acute abdominal pain. In addition to routine laboratory tests, urinary PGE-M levels will be analyzed. The study involves minimal risk to participants

Gender: All

Ages: 5 Years - 17 Years

Updated: 2025-06-06

Acute Appendicitis
Acute Appendicitis With Rupture
Abdominal Pain (AP)
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT06834958

Clinical Diagnosis of Acute Appendicitis with Normal WBCS Count with Role of Inflammatory Markers and Radiology

The aim of this study is to describe the proportion of pa-tients with normal preoperative inflammatorymarkers among patients with histopathologically proven acute appendicitis

Gender: All

Ages: 14 Days - 60 Days

Updated: 2025-02-19

Acute Appendicitis
RECRUITING

NCT06624215

Retrospective Acute Care Appendectomy Study

The purpose of this retrospective study is to compare perioperative data for subjects who have undergone an emergent or urgent robotic-assisted or laparoscopic appendectomy for acute appendicitis.

Gender: All

Ages: 22 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-02-05

3 states

Acute Appendicitis
RECRUITING

NCT06699433

Artificial Intelligence-driven Virtual Standardized Pediatric Patients Trial

Background: China's healthcare system for children faces significant challenges, particularly due to the limited pediatric service capacity of primary healthcare institutions. A shortage of effective and accessible training tools for primary care doctors further hinders progress in addressing this gap. Technological advancements, especially in artificial intelligence, offer a potential solution to improve pediatric care. Artificial intelligence-driven virtual standardized patients (VSPs), leveraging internet and virtual simulation technologies, simulate clinical cases with specific disease characteristics, providing an innovative, efficient, and flexible training method. VSPs are increasingly utilized in medical education, clinical reasoning, and licensure exams. This study focuses on using VSPs to improve the management of common pediatric conditions, which are major health concerns for children and impose significant psychological and financial burdens on families. Methods: This study will involve a three-arm randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of a virtual pediatric standardized patient platform in enhancing primary care doctors' management of common pediatric diseases. At least 459 participants, including general practitioners, internal medicine practitioners, surgeons, and pediatricians from more than 10 provinces across China, will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: the virtual patient platform group, the case teaching manual group, or the case teaching video group. Five virtual patient cases covering pneumococcal pneumonia, rotavirus enteritis with hypovolemic shock, hand-foot-and-mouth disease, acute appendicitis, and respiratory failure will be developed, along with corresponding case teaching materials. After a two-week learning period, participants' disease management abilities will be assessed using clinical vignettes. The primary outcome is adherence to best clinical practice guidelines, categorized into full adherence, partial adherence, and nonadherence. Discussion: This study aims to leverage artificial intelligence for capacity enhancement, targeting the shortcomings of primary care pediatrics and using VSP to help enhance primary care pediatrics capacity. It is a randomized controlled trial involving over 300 primary healthcare institutions across more than 10 provinces in China, ensuring broad and representative participation from both developed and underdeveloped regions.

Gender: All

Updated: 2024-12-19

3 states

Pneumococcal Pneumonia
Rotavirus Enteritis With Hypovolemic Shock
Hand-foot-and-mouth Disease
+2
RECRUITING

NCT06563349

Magnesium Sulfate in Children Undergoing Laparoscopic Appendectomy

Magnesium sulfate is one of the most commonly used co-analgetics. Its antinociceptive effect is related to antagonizing NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors of the nervous system, has an anti-inflammatory effect by reducing the concentration of IL-6 (interleukin 6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha. In adult patients, the need for morphine in the perioperative period is reduced when magnesium infusion is used. In current guidelines for treatment of acute pain in children, magnesium sulfate may be considered as a co-analgetic. However, the strength of such a recommendation is low due to the lack of reliable scientific research confirming the effectiveness of magnesium infusion in the pediatric population. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of intravenous magnesium sulfate infusion on the opioid consumption, the circulatory, metabolic and hormonal response to intubation and surgical trauma during anesthesia for laparoscopic appendectomy in children.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Months - 18 Years

Updated: 2024-11-12

Opioid Consumption
Multimodal Analgesia
Acute Appendicitis
+1
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT03236961

Optimizing the Antibiotic Treatment of Uncomplicated Acute Appendicitis

Appendicectomy has been the treatment of acute appendicitis for over a hundred years. Appendicectomy, however, includes operative and postoperative risks despite being a routine procedure. Several studies have proved promising results of the safety and efficiency of antibiotics in the treatment of acute uncomplicated appendicitis. The APPAC study by the investigators, published in 2015 in the Journal of American Medical Association, also proved promising results with 73% of patients with uncomplicated appendicitis treated successfully with antibiotics. None of the patients initially treated with antibiotics that later had appendectomy had major complications. The results of the APPAC trial suggest that CT proven uncomplicated acute appendicitis is not a surgical emergency and antibiotic therapy is a safe first-line treatment option. Reducing unnecessary appendectomies has also been shown to lead to significant economic savings. The aim of this randomized prospective study is to optimize antibiotic therapy for uncomplicated acute appendicitis by comparing different antibiotic regimens; intravenous antibiotic (ertapenem) followed by per oral antibiotic (levofloxacin and metronidazole) with only per oral antibiotics (moxifloxacin). Before randomization, the diagnosis of acute uncomplicated appendicitis is confirmed with a CT scan. The hypothesis is that broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics requiring additional hospital resources are not necessary for the treatment of uncomplicated acute appendicitis and that per oral mono therapy is non-inferior to the combination of intravenous and per oral antibiotic therapy.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years

Updated: 2020-11-12

Acute Appendicitis
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT03234296

Antibiotics vs. Placebo in Acute Uncomplicated Appendicitis

Appendicectomy has been the treatment of acute appendicitis for over a hundred years. Appendicectomy, however, includes operative and postoperative risks despite being a "routine" operation. At the same time other similar intra-abdominal infections, such as diverticulitis, are treated with antibiotics. Several studies have proved promising results of the safety and efficiency of antibiotics in the treatment of acute uncomplicated appendicitis. Our previous APPAC study, published in 2015 in the Journal of American Medical Association, also proved promising results with 73% of patients with CT-diagnosed uncomplicated appendicitis treated successfully with antibiotics within one-year follow-up. None of the patients initially treated with antibiotics that later had appendectomy had major complications. The results of the APPAC trial suggest that CT proven uncomplicated acute appendicitis is not a surgical emergency and antibiotic therapy is a safe first-line treatment option. Reducing unnecessary appendectomies has also been shown to lead to significant economic savings. Already in 1886 Fitz noted that 1/3 of patients in a large series of autopsies from the pre-appendicectomy era had evidence of prior appendices inflammation suggesting spontaneous resolution of acute appendicitis. Acute appendicitis is thought to be similar to acute diverticulitis ("left-sided appendicitis") and this similarity has been shown in epidemiological studies. Recent studies have shown no benefit of antibiotic treatment in the treatment of uncomplicated diverticulitis with outpatient management without antibiotics proving safe and well-functioning. The aim of this randomised double-blinded study is to compare antibiotic therapy with placebo to evaluate the role of antibiotic therapy in the resolution of CT-diagnosed uncomplicated acute appendicitis. The hypothesis is that antibiotic therapy is necessary in the treatment of acute uncomplicated appendicitis and that antibiotic therapy is superior to spontaneous resolution (placebo) with the primary endpoint evaluated at ten days after the intervention.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years

Updated: 2020-11-10

Acute Appendicitis
RECRUITING

NCT03643718

Web-based International Register of Emergency Surgery and Trauma

The WIRES-T project (Web-based International Registry of Emergency General Surgery and Trauma) has been set up to allow to all the EGS (Emergency General Surgery) and Trauma surgeons to register their activity and to obtain a worldwide register of traumatic and non traumatic surgical emergencies. This will give the opportunity to evaluate results on a macro-data basis and to give index allowing stratifying, evaluating and improving the outcomes.

Gender: All

Updated: 2020-07-14

Acute Appendicitis
Acute Cholecystitis
Acute Diverticulitis
+12