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Prospective evaluation of interobserver variability of the hydronephrosis index and the renal resistive index as sonographic examination methods for the evaluation of acute hydronephrosis
Author(s) -
Rud Oleg,
Moersler Johannes,
Peter Julia,
Waliszewski Przemyslaw,
Gilfrich Christian,
Häuser Hannes,
Burger Maximilian,
Fritsche HansMartin,
Wieland Wolf F.,
Ahmed Ali M.,
BrookmanMay Sabine,
May Matthias
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
bju international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 1464-4096
DOI - 10.1111/j.1464-410x.2012.11087.x
Subject(s) - hydronephrosis , resistive index , medicine , index (typography) , prospective cohort study , radiology , ultrasonography , urinary system , computer science , world wide web
Study Type – Diagnosis (reliability) Level of Evidence 2b What's known on the subject? and What does the study add? Conventional sonography is the standard imaging technique used in patients with acute renal colic. A decreasing hydronephrosis index (HI) is associated with an increase in obstructive uropathy. Obstructive uropathy leads to an increase in the renal resistive index (RRI). The present study shows that both the RRI and HI methods are easily practicable in patients presenting with stone‐related renal colic. The grade of hydronephrosis correlates positively with the HI but not with the RI. OBJECTIVE• To confirm the reliability of assessements of the renal resistive index (RRI) and the hydronephrosis index (HI) comprising two sonographic techniques providing additional information in patients with acute renal colic.PATIENTS AND METHODS• Sonographic measurement of hydronephrosis and assessment of common clinical criteria was performed in 22 consecutive patients presenting with unilateral stone‐related renal colic. RRI and HI were separately recorded by two investigators within a prospective study. • Interobserver agreement and comparison of sonographic with computed tomography (CT) findings were assessed with the Cohen's kappa statistic (κ) for attributive ordinal characteristics and Spearman's rank correlation/rho (ρ) for attributive metric characteristics.RESULTS• There was a significant correlation between HI and the sonographically‐evaluated grade of hydronephrosis, although not between RRI and the grade of hydronephrosis. • For all procedures (RRI, HI, sonography and CT), significant differences between the symptomatic and the asymptomatic kidney were assessed. • Interobserver agreement was excellent for the grade assessment of hydronephrosis by conventional sonography (κ= 0.82; P < 0.001), good to very good for HI (ρ= 0.60; P = 0.003) and acceptable to good for RRI (ρ= 0.49; P = 0.021).CONCLUSIONS• The RRI and HI methods are both easily practicable as stageless examination methods in patients presenting with stone‐related renal colic, and both also reliably distinguish between obstruction and non‐obstruction. • Exact thresholds for both methods must still be defined based on further successive studies. • Additionally, changes of values under medical expulsive therapy and correlation with the functional status of the obstructed kidney remain to be examined.