The present study demonstrates the negative mid-term effects in paediatric patients with AA during the first 9 months from the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. After analysing 1274 cases a longer delay to first consultation or the ED, a higher rate of complicated appendicitis, a prolonged hospital stay and a higher postoperative complications rate in patients presenting during the COVID-19 pandemic period when compared with previous years has been observed.
Acute appendicitis is one of the most commonly reported causes of acute abdomen in children presenting to the ED, and it is traditionally believed to develop secondary to luminal obstruction either by fecalith or lymphoid hyperplasia (13). Progression of appendiceal distention to frank perforation occurs in 20–75% of cases and can impart significant morbidity (14). Yet, it is difficult to differentiate it from other causes as less than 50% of patients present with classic symptoms (15). Delay in presentation is a major driver of perforation, with perforation rates increasing linearly with duration of symptoms (16).
Since the onset of SARS-Cov-2 pandemic, management of acute appendicitis has been affected by epidemiological changes reported by multiple authors, with a delay the time of diagnosis, increased frequently peritonitis and more severe septic abdominal diseases (17). In this context, abdominal CT scans performed on patients with AA during the acute pandemic period show a higher severity of disease when compared with cases in the nonpandemic comparison period (18). These findings were also observed in patients at our centre, where we report an increase in complicated appendicitis and postoperative complications during the pandemic outbreak when compared with patients operated on during the same time period during the previous years (9). We found as a possible explanation changes in parental behaviour during the COVID-19 outbreak, where many parents described a delay in seeking assessment for their child's abdominal pain due to fears of in-hospital SARS-CoV-2. Many other studies in different disciplines have confirmed a significant reduction of ED visits during the COVID-19 outbreak, which raises concern about the effect of this behavior on patients’ prognoses (4). Furthermore, in the areas most affected by the pandemic such as our region, these concerns dramatically influenced people’s willingness to seek medical care, even to the point of avoiding acute care. Mantica et al. found that the lowest numbers of ED visits corresponded with the highest numbers of deaths from COVID-19 (19).
On this background, once the first wave of the pandemic was over, and once the home confinement measures were lifted, in our centre we continued observing the same tendency of delay in going to the ED in children with abdominal pain, as well as a high proportion of complicated appendicitis, so we decided to analyse the results of patients operated on during the first 9 months after the beginning of the pandemic. According to the results of our study, although patients presented to the ED with comparable individual demographic features in both groups, the cohort of patients who underwent surgery after the COVID-19 outbreak presented a difference of more than 10 hours in the time from onset of symptoms (34 vs. 24 hours). This delay in diagnosis and early preoperative antibiotic treatment was directly related to the increase in complicated appendicitis in this group of patients when compared to the control group. In addition, COVID-19 group patients exhibited an almost 1.5 times higher rate of surgical complications (21.5% vs. 15.6%), with increased severity values in the Claviden-Dindo classification. As an expected consequence, the length of hospitalization was significantly increased in the COVID-19 group. These findings illustrate a critical scenario that began in the pandemic outbreak in March 2020, and which has been sustained over time during the first 9 months of the pandemic: throughout a period in which healthcare resources and funds have been concentrated on the pandemic (COVID-19 screening tests, clinical trials vaccination studies), an increased burden of surgical complications has increased both hospital costs and assistance efforts in children with acute appendicitis.
During the home confinement period in Europe the rate of perforated appendicitis in childhood and adolescence increased significantly. Potentially this was attributed to a delayed presentation to the ED due to the “stay-at home” policy, parent's fear of the hospital environment or the wish not to strain hospital workload further with seemingly manageable conditions. However, after the end of the COVID-19 outbreak and the end of the curfew period the results of our study continue revealing negative consequences derived from the delay in attending the ED of parents with children with abdominal pain. This diagnostic delay has again resulted in an increase in complicated appendicitis, a higher rate of postoperative complications and a longer hospital stay. This can no longer be justified by home confinement and mobility restriction measures, so we must look for other causes for these findings. One possible explanation for the reluctance of parents to go to the ED with their children may be the lack of available vaccines during 2020. At the beginning of 2021, the first national vaccination campaigns on the most at-risk population (health professionals, elderly patients) started. It will be necessary to assess the impact of these vaccination campaigns on parents' behaviour in relation to coming to the hospital setting. In addition, another fact that may explain the delay in diagnosis is that local health centres remain closed, with only telephone consultations. This may contribute to parents treating abdominal pain with analgesia at home, and only when it does not improve after several days do they decide to go to the ED. Therefore, reopening the health centres during 2021 may help to decrease the high rate of complicated appendicitis encountered during the first 9 months after the start of the pandemic. Because of potential long-term sequelae of complicated appendicitis such as intestinal adhesions with obstruction these adverse effects of a reduced utilization of health care facilities should be considered for future political decision making. It is important to advise legal authorities not to discourage the population to seek timely medical attention in case of emergency conditions in order to avoid collateral damage in near-future or on-going pandemic situations (20). Parents and general pediatricians practitioners should be aware of these problems to avoid a time delay from initial symptoms to consultation (21). Health authorities should encourage vaccination of the general population and facilitate access to health care. These measures will need to be evaluated in patients undergoing surgery for acute appendicitis in the coming months.
The retrospective and single centre design are some of the limitations in our study. Due to the restricted postoperative follow-up in the first 30-days after surgery, the study is also lacking in long-term follow-up and the effect of the children's recovery in terms of quality of life, and also the implications of absence from school and return to normal activity. Multicentre studies assessing the long-term consequences of the impact of pandemic COVID-19 in children with acute appendicitis are needed.