Improving the diagnostic accuracy of appendicitis using a multidisciplinary pathway

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Saroop Dhatt, Vikram Sabhaney, Heather Bray, Erik D. Skarsgard Published:

Author / Expert

Saroop Dhatt, Vikram Sabhaney, Heather Bray, Erik D. Skarsgard

Topic overview

Abstract

Background/Purpose

Improvement opportunities exist in the accuracy and timeliness of the diagnosis of childhood appendicitis. The purpose of our study was to conduct a post-implementation audit of a diagnostic pathway for children with suspected appendicitis presenting to our pediatric emergency department.

Methods

We adopted a diagnostic pathway that utilized a validated risk of appendicitis stratification tool (Alvarado Score) with protocolized use of abdominal ultrasound for moderate risk patients. We conducted a 10% convenience sample audit of pathway patients treated over the subsequent 18-month period. Outcome measures included false negative and positive rates, sensitivity, specificity, and overall pathway accuracy.

Results

One hundred thirty-four pathway patients, of which 22 (16.4%) had appendicitis confirmed pathologically, were evaluated. The risk group distribution of patients was: low risk (29%), moderate risk (60%), and high risk (11%). The negative appendectomy rate was 4.4% (reduced from 14% pre-pathway), and the false negative (missed appendicitis) rate was 3.0%. No patients received CT scans. Pathway sensitivity was 81.8%% (95% CI 59.7% to 94.8%), specificity-92.9%% (95% CI 86.4%–96.9%), and overall accuracy-91.0% (95% CI 84.9%–95.3%).

Conclusion

Implementation of a diagnostic pathway achieved a high level of accuracy and reduced our institutional negative appendectomy rate by 67%. The audit identified additional pathway improvement opportunities.

Levels of Evidence

Level IV.

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