Hyperbilirubinemia as a Significant Indicator in Diagnosis of Complicated Acute Appendicitis: A Prospective Study

Document Type : Original Article

Authors

Department of General Surgery, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

Abstract

Background: Acute appendicitis is the most common cause of acute abdomen in young adults. In recent years, studies emerged showing that elevated serum total bilirubin levels could indicate a complicated case of acute appendicitis. An elevated serum total bilirubin that is not explained by liver disease or biliary obstruction can be present in many patients of acute appendicitis.
 
Patients and methods: This is a prospective interventional non-randomized non-controlled study conducted on 175 consecutive cases of acute appendicitis admitted to the emergency unit in the Department of General Surgery at Ain Shams University hospitals, Cairo, Egypt in the period from July 2014 to August
2016. Liver function tests were done as a part of the preoperative investigations. Clinical diagnosis was confirmed postoperatively by histopathological examination. Their clinical and investigative data were analyzed, The level of significance was set at P< 0.05.
 
Results: Serum total bilirubin was found to be significantly elevated in cases of complicated acute appendicitis.
 
Conclusion: Serum total bilirubin is a new important adjunct in the diagnosis of complicated acute
appendicitis.

Keywords


 

Hyperbilirubinemia  as  a  Significant  Indicator  in  Diagnosis  of

Complicated Acute Appendicitis: A Prospective Study

 

Fady Makram, MD, FACS; Ahmed Shoka, MD, MRCS; Mohamed Matar, MD, FACS

Department of General Surgery, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt

 

 

 

Background: Acute appendicitis is the most common cause of acute abdomen in young adults. In recent years, studies emerged showing that elevated serum total bilirubin levels could indicate a complicated case of acute appendicitis. An elevated serum total bilirubin that is not explained by liver disease or biliary obstruction can be present in many patients of acute appendicitis.

 

Patients and methods: This is a prospective interventional non-randomized non-controlled study conducted on 175 consecutive cases of acute appendicitis admitted to the emergency unit in the Department of General Surgery at Ain Shams University hospitals, Cairo, Egypt in the period from July 2014 to August

2016. Liver function tests were done as a part of the preoperative investigations. Clinical diagnosis was confirmed postoperatively by histopathological examination. Their clinical and investigative data were analyzed, The level of significance was set at P< 0.05.

 

Results: Serum total bilirubin was found to be significantly elevated in cases of complicated acute appendicitis.

 

Conclusion: Serum total bilirubin is a new important adjunct in the diagnosis of complicated acute

appendicitis.

 

Key words: Hyperbilirubinemia, acute appendicitis, acute abdomen.

 

 

 

 

Introduction

Appendectomy is one of the most commonly performed abdominal surgeries in the emergency settings, delay in diagnosis and surgery for this condition may lead to various complications like perforation, intraabdominal abscesses, small bowel obstruction and peritonitis causing an increase in morbidity and even mortality of these patients.1

 

On the other hand, too aggressive surgical approach may lead to an increased rate of negative appendectomies. The incidence of perforated acute appendicitis in adults has been reported from 13–37% or higher.2

 

Hyperbilirubinemia is the result of imbalance between production and excretion of bilirubin by the liver. Elevated serum bilirubin level and jaundice are commonly observed in patients suffering from a septic condition.3

 

Acute appendicitis is the most common intra- abdominal infectious focus in a surgical patient, Escherichia coli and Bacteroides fragilis are the most frequent bacterial isolates in this condition.4

Bacteraemia is known to cause endotoxemia leading to impaired excretion of bilirubin from the bile canaliculi.5

 

Few case reports have described hyperbilirubinemia in patients with severe postoperative infection after appendectomy or with complicated acute appendicitis.

 

The aim of this study was to establish the role of serum total bilirubin level as an additive diagnostic tool to diagnose complicated acute appendicitis and to accelerate early intervention, the establishment of a possible role of hyperbilirubinemia as a predictor of complicated acute appendicitis has been stressed so that level of serum total bilirubin on admission can be used in combination with leucocytic count, pelviabdominal ultrasonography and  computed  tomography  to  help  determine the presence of complication and to aid suitable management.

 

 

Patients and methods

This prospective interventional non-randomized non-controlled study was conducted in the Emergency Unit in the Department of General Surgery at Ain Shams University hospitals, Cairo, Egypt in the period from July 2014 to August 2016. All patients were admitted with the diagnosis of acute appendicitis. Serum total bilirubin was done in addition to the routine investigations including total leukocytic count and pelviabdominal ultrasonography. 

 

Patients with elevated serum total bilirubin were investigated  by  hepatitis  viral  markers.  After the operation, all specimens were sent for histopathological  examination  and  only  cases with acute appendicitis or complicated acute appendicitis were included in our study.

 

Exclusion  criteria:  All  patients  documented to have a history of jaundice or liver disease, chronic alcoholism, hemolytic disease, acquired or congenital biliary disease, viral hepatitis, and complicated acute appendicitis was 0.77 and that for complicated cases was 1.62 (p=0.001) which was a significant rise in serum total bilirubin in patients with complicated acute appendicitis (Table 2).

 

 

Table 2:  Serum total bilirubin in  complicated and non-complicated cases

Mean            SD          P-value

Complicated acute

appendicitis                      1.62            0.27

 

patients with cholelithiasis.

 

Also,   patients   with   normal   appendix   which was proved by postoperative histopathological examination were excluded from the study.


 

Non-complicated

acute appendicitisv           0.77             0.15

 

 

Discussion 

0.77

Statistical  methodology:  Data  were  coded and entered using the statistical package SPSS (Statistical   Package   for   the   Social   Science) version 23. Data was summarized using mean, minimum and maximum in quantitative data and using frequency (count) and relative frequency (percentage) for categorical data.

 

Results

Patients’ demographics: (Table 1) Our study consisted of 175 patients: 84 males (48%) and 91 females (52%) with acute appendicitis that was proved postoperatively by histopathological examination.  

The age varied between 14 years and 62 years with mean age 28.3 years.

 

 

Table 1: Patients’ demographics

Number         Percentage

 

Male                  84                   48% Sex

Female                91                   52%

Mean             Minimum         Maximum


The incidence of acute appendicitis differs, but it is highly prevalent, occurring in 7 to 22 out of 10,000 people.6

 

Non-complicated acute appendicitis can be treated by an appendectomy without a long recovery period, whereas, complicated appendicitis can cause different complications that can lead to life- threatening conditions.7

 

Recent developments in the diagnosis of acute appendicitis with the assistance of different radiological tools such as ultrasonography and computed tomography have reduced the rate of negative appendectomies. Although the known diagnostic accuracy of ultrasonography varies depending on the patient population studied, a meta-analysis reported an overall ultrasonographic specificity of 92% and a sensitivity of 85%.8 Because of the development of helical CT, the accuracy and the effectiveness of diagnosing appendicitis have already defeat the limitation of ultrasonography, with sensitivities of 90 to 99% and specificities of 91 to 99%.9

 

Age


84                  14.00                62.00


 

However, a recent study by Pritchett et al., 201010

Duration of symptoms ranged from 6 hours to maximum 7 days. Among the 175 cases, according to the intraoperative findings and the postoperative histopathological results, 115 cases (65.71%) were non-complicated acute appendicitis while 60 cases (34.28%) were complicated either by abscess formation or appendicular perforation.  

Among the 60 complicated cases, hyperbilirubinemia was found in 51 patients (sensitivity=85%), while normal bilirubin was found in 9 patients (15%), on the other hand, out of the 115 non-complicated cases, normal bilirubin was found in 98 patients (specificity=85.21%) while it was elevated in 17 patients (14.78%) with accuracy 85.14%.  

The mean total bilirubin for patients with non- reported that the widespread use of computed tomography scanning in acute appendicitis increases the care cost and the hospital stay and delays the time to surgical intervention. Because clinical examinations and laboratory investigations are still acknowledged as being of the utmost importance in the diagnostic process,11 we tried to find key laboratory tests that would allow us to anticipate the severity of acute appendicitis.

 

Miller and Irvine, 196912  first reported that jaundice          was    common    in    patients    with severe   appendicitis,   Recently   Sand   et   al., 200913    reported  a  relatively  high  incidence  of hyperbilirubinemia (24.9%) from an analysis of538 acute appendicitis patients of whom 50.7% were verified as having perforated appendicitis.

He   derived   hypothesis   that   elevated   serum total bilirubin levels can be associated with appendicular perforation. They explained the raised serum bilirubin levels by the invasion of gram negative bacteria through muscularis propria of the appendix leading to the direct invasion or translocation of germs through portal system and liver interfering with bilirubin excretion through bile ducts by endotoxin action.

 

Recently,  few  studies  have  investigated  the role of serum total bilirubin in diagnosis of perforated appendicitis,  one  study has found hyperbilirubinemia to be an important predictive marker for perforated and necrotizing appendicitis. In this series of 157 patients, the odds of gangrenous and perforated appendicitis were found to be 3 times higher for patients having hyperbilirubinemia than those with normal bilirubin level.14

 

A   retrospective   Cohort   study   performed   in two centers involving 155 cases of perforated appendicitis and 570 cases of non-perforated appendicitis      compared      hyperbilirubinemia, C-reactive protein, leucocytic count and age as a marker of perforated appendicitis, they concluded that hyperbilirubinemia is a statistically significant marker of perforated appendicitis, but they also found that C-reactive protein to be a superior marker of perforation than hyperbilirubinemia.15

 

Emmanuel A et al., 201116  concluded that the positive predictive value of hyperbilirubinemia in appendicular perforation was found to be 91% in his study. 

Multivariate   analysis   done   by   Young   Ran Hong et al., 201217 stated that the Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS) score and hyperbilirubinemia are significant predictors of appendicular perforation, whereas the leucocytic count and segmented neutrophils, which are used as  markers  of  acute  inflammation  frequently, were not statistically significant. However, as the SIRS score itself is a sum of four figures with four criteria, using it as an independent variable would be inappropriate. They confirmed that hyperbilirubinemia has a predictive value in acute appendicitis patients.

 

Diagnostic meta-analysis of 4974 patients was done by Salvatore G et al., 2013,18  eight studies were used for this pooled analysis: seven of them were retrospective and only one prospective cohort with clear heterogeneity in settings and methods (e.g. country, time since diagnosis, operative   indications).   They   concluded   that alone, hyperbilirubinemia is not a strong enough predictor, but it might be useful when combined in a scoring system, so, it is considered that further studies would be useful especially when there are poor resource settings with limited availability of other imaging studies.

 

Conclusion

Serum total bilirubin should be routinely performed as a part of the preoperative assessment in cases of  suspected  acute  appendicitis.  It can  serve as an important marker of complicated acute appendicitis.

References

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