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Bedside ultrasonography for acute gallstone disease: a diagnostic accuracy study of surgical registrars and emergency medicine physicians
Author(s) -
MacDonald Andrew A.,
Richardson Malcolm,
Sue Lisa,
Hakiwai Angie,
Stephenson George,
Harman Richard,
Agraval Jash
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
anz journal of surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.426
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1445-2197
pISSN - 1445-1433
DOI - 10.1111/ans.16169
Subject(s) - medicine , gallstones , acute cholecystitis , radiology , ultrasound , cholecystitis , confidence interval , gallbladder , prospective cohort study , general surgery , surgery
Background Acute gallstone disease, primarily biliary colic and acute cholecystitis, represents a significant burden on surgical services. Prolonged waiting times for ultrasonography to confirm a diagnosis contributes to inefficiency and delays surgery. Bedside ultrasound offers an opportunity for clinicians make a diagnosis more promptly and streamline acute surgery. This study evaluated the reliability of bedside ultrasound performed by clinicians following local training and a trial of its introduction into clinical practice. Methods This was a prospective inter‐rater reliability study of bedside ultrasound scans performed on patients referred for suspected acute gallstone disease. Results were compared with a formal ultrasound scan in the radiology department. Inter‐rater agreement for the finding of gallstones and the imaging diagnosis of acute cholecystitis was assessed. Results A total of 124 patients underwent bedside ultrasound scan, 87 (70.2%) performed by surgical registrars. Mean patient age was 48 years (range 19–92 years) with 95 females (76.6%). Inter‐rater reliability for the finding of gallstones showed strong agreement with kappa 0.85 (95% confidence interval 0.76–0.95) whereas for the imaging diagnosis of acute cholecystitis there was a minimal agreement with kappa 0.37 (95% confidence interval 0.18–0.56). Sensitivity and specificity for the finding of gallstones on bedside ultrasound was 93% and 92%, respectively. Conclusion Bedside ultrasound is accurate for the finding of gallstones, but the imaging diagnosis of acute cholecystitis is more challenging. There remains the potential for this to improve the efficiency of surgical assessment in suspected acute gallstone disease and this supports the ongoing provision of bedside ultrasound in surgical services.