Surgical outcomes in complicated appendicitis: does timing or surgeon seniority matter? A propensity score-matched analysis from the RIFT Turkey cohort

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Abstract

Background

Complicated acute appendicitis carries a higher risk of postoperative morbidity relative to uncomplicated cases. It remains unclear whether surgical timing (night vs. day; weekend vs. weekday) or surgeon seniority influence short-term outcomes in this high-risk population.

Methods

This was a retrospective analysis of the RIFT Turkey dataset restricted to histologically confirmed cases of complicated appendicitis who had undergone laparoscopic appendectomy. Primary exposures were surgical timing (day [n=92] vs. night [n=123]; weekday [n=172] vs. weekend [n=43]) and surgeon seniority (trainee [n=89] vs. consultant [n=126]). The primary outcome was unplanned readmission and/or reintervention within 60 days. Secondary outcomes were conversion to open surgery and length of stay (LOS) >3 days. Propensity score matching (PSM) using RIPASA score (caliper 0.05, SMD <0.1) was performed as a pre-specified sensitivity analysis for each comparison.

Results

Night-time surgery was associated with higher frequencies of unplanned readmission / reintervention (12.2% vs. 6.5%; OR 1.99 [95% CI 0.74-5.35], p=0.166) and surgical conversion (9.8% vs. 3.3%; OR 3.21 [0.88-11.72], p=0.064) compared with daytime surgery, neither reaching significance. Trainee surgeons had significantly higher readmission/reintervention rates than consultants (15.7% vs. 5.6%; OR 0.32 [0.12-0.82], p=0.013). PSM-adjusted results also showed similar relationships: night vs. day (readmission OR 2.45 [0.85-7.03], p=0.09; conversion OR 2.84 [0.73-11.1], p=0.13), weekend vs. weekday (readmission OR 1.53 [0.24-9.72], p=0.65), and trainee vs. consultant (readmission OR 0.25 [0.08-0.79], p=0.013).

Conclusion

Surgical timing was not significantly associated with short-term outcomes in complicated appendicitis, though night-time surgery showed a consistent trend towards higher complication rates. Surgeon seniority was the only factor independently and significantly associated with unplanned readmission and reintervention in both primary and PSM analyses, indicating the need for senior supervision during out-of-hours procedures.

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