A plea for incidental appendectomy in pediatric patients with malignancy.

The evaluation of right lower quadrant (RLQ) abdominal pain in pediatric patients with malignancy can be difficult. However, since the mortality rate from peritoneal infections in these patients is very high, the differential diagnosis of RLQ peritoneal irritation, mainly of acute appendicitis (AA) versus neutropenic enterocolitis (NE), is crucial. Three cases of pediatric patients with malignancy demonstrating these difficulties are represented to enlighten this problem. The first patient died of multiorgan failure after operation for perforated appendicitis without generalized peritonitis. The second had a severe life-threatening postoperative complication because of delayed diagnosis of acute appendicitis. The third patient with malignant pelvic spread, underwent an unnecessary abdominal exploration for suspected AA. In all these cases and probably in many others, the clinical outcome could have been different if a previous incidental appendectomy had been performed during the primary abdominal operation. Incidental appendectomy in oncologic patients is recommended to facilitate the differential diagnosis of RLQ pain and to exclude the diagnosis of AA.

[1]  H. Till,et al.  Endoscopic appendectomy in childhood--technical aspects. , 1994, European journal of pediatric surgery : official journal of Austrian Association of Pediatric Surgery ... [et al] = Zeitschrift fur Kinderchirurgie.

[2]  Y. Chavrier,et al.  Laparoscopic versus open appendectomy in children--comparative study of 403 cases. , 1994, European journal of pediatric surgery : official journal of Austrian Association of Pediatric Surgery ... [et al] = Zeitschrift fur Kinderchirurgie.

[3]  J. Strain,et al.  Indications for surgical intervention for gastrointestinal emergencies in children receiving chemotherapy , 1994, Cancer.

[4]  M. Ritchey,et al.  Incidental appendectomy during nephrectomy for Wilms' tumor. , 1993, Surgery, gynecology & obstetrics.

[5]  T. Fabian,et al.  Inversion-ligation appendectomy for incidental appendectomy. , 1991, American journal of surgery.

[6]  W. Nylander The acute abdomen in the immunocompromised host. , 1988, The Surgical clinics of North America.

[7]  J. Skibber,et al.  Right lower quadrant pain in young patients with leukemia. A surgical perspective. , 1987, Annals of surgery.

[8]  H. Weinstein,et al.  The medical and surgical management of typhlitis in children with acute nonlymphocytic (myelogenous) leukemia , 1986, Cancer.

[9]  M. Woolley,et al.  Surgical complications in the patient with leukemia. , 1973, Journal of pediatric surgery.

[10]  S. Harvey,et al.  Laparoscopic versus conventional appendectomy. , 1995, Annals of Surgery.