Association of complicated appendicitis with geographic and socioeconomic measures in children

Surgery. 2024 Nov;176(5):1475-1484. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2024.07.044. Epub 2024 Sep 3.

Abstract

Background: Complicated appendicitis, considered a marker of delay in accessing surgical care among children, has been inconsistently associated with race, socioeconomic status, insurance type, rurality, and distance to care. This statewide assessment measured factors associated with complicated appendicitis while overcoming limitations of prior work, namely, selection bias and use of inexact socioeconomic status measures.

Methods: Children (<18 years) undergoing appendectomy for appendicitis in Wisconsin from 2018 to 2021 were identified in the Wisconsin Hospital Association database. Patient residence and hospital locations were used to determine rurality, travel distances, and socioeconomic status as measured by Area Deprivation Index, Child Opportunity Index, Community Need Index, and county-level poverty rates. Multivariable logistic regression was used to assess factors associated with complicated appendicitis.

Results: Among 5,881 children undergoing appendectomy, 1,375 (23.4%) had complicated appendicitis. Adjusting for other variables, complicated appendicitis was associated with younger age (adjusted odds ratio 0.90 per year increase); Hispanic White race/ethnicity (adjusted odds ratio 1.40-1.63); distance to the hospital where surgery was performed (adjusted odds ratio 1.16-1.17 per 10-mile increase); and very low Child Opportunity Index (adjusted odds ratio 1.29), Community Need Index (adjusted odds ratio 1.20 per 1-score increase), and county-level poverty (adjusted odds ratio 1.02 per 1% increase). Insurance type, rurality, and Area Deprivation Index were not associated with complicated appendicitis. Residential county-level complicated appendicitis rates (0.0%-50.0%) had moderate correlation to pediatric county-level poverty rates (rs=0.43).

Conclusion: Complicated appendicitis was associated with Child Opportunity Index, Community Need Index, and county-level poverty but not insurance type, rurality, or Area Deprivation Index. There was geographic variability in complicated appendicitis rates, with modest correlation to county-level poverty. Targeted interventions among Hispanic populations and those with travel- and socioeconomic status-related barriers to care may be beneficial in preventing complicated appendicitis among children.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Appendectomy* / statistics & numerical data
  • Appendicitis* / complications
  • Appendicitis* / epidemiology
  • Appendicitis* / surgery
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Female
  • Health Services Accessibility / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Male
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Social Class
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Wisconsin / epidemiology