
Validity of Hysteroscopy and Transvaginal Sonography in Evaluating Abnormal Uterine Bleeding- A Retrospective Study
Author(s) -
Sangam Jha,
Monika Anant,
Upasna Sinha
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of clinical and diagnostic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2249-782X
pISSN - 0973-709X
DOI - 10.7860/jcdr/2021/47269.14771
Subject(s) - hysteroscopy , medicine , gold standard (test) , retrospective cohort study , hysterectomy , diagnostic accuracy , radiology , uterine bleeding , obstetrics , gynecology , surgery
Abnormal Uterine Bleeding (AUB) affects 14-25% of women of reproductive age group and accounts for 66% of hysterectomies. Accurate diagnosis of the cause of AUB will reduce the hysterectomy burden, but the ideal evaluating tool to accurately diagnose the cause of the same is debatable. Aim: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of transvaginal sonography and hysteroscopy in the evaluation of abnormal uterine bleeding, using histopathological diagnosis as gold standard. Materials and Methods: This retrospective descriptive study was conducted on patients who underwent transvaginal sonography and hysteroscopy for evaluation of abnormal uterine bleeding from January 2017 to January 2020. Data including demographic details, sonographic details, pre-operative diagnosis, anaesthesia used, operative notes, complications and histopathological diagnosis were obtained from clinical record sheet of the patients. Sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy of TVS and hysteroscopy was calculated using MedCalc software version 19.2.6. Results: A total of 214 patients were enrolled in the study. Hysteroscopy reported >95% diagnostic accuracy for all intrauterine pathology compared to TVS which revealed diagnostic accuracy of 73.13% for polyp, 77.1% for endometrial hyperplasia and 73.6% for all other pathology. Hysteroscopy revealed strong to almost perfect correlation with histopathological diagnosis for all pathology compared to TVS which demonstrated weak correlation for various intrauterine pathology. Conclusion: Hysteroscopy should be used as initial evaluating tool in AUB as it is simple and minimal-invasive with high diagnostic accuracy.