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Diagnostic Accuracy of Point-of-Care Ultrasound Integrated into Clinical Examination for Acute Diverticulitis: A Prospective Multicenter Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the use of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) alongside clinical exams for diagnosing diverticulitis in emergency departments, comparing it to traditional CT scans.
  • It involved 393 patients, with POCUS demonstrating high sensitivity (92.7%) and specificity (90.9%) for diverticulitis, but low sensitivity (50%) for complicated cases.
  • The findings suggest POCUS allows for a quicker diagnosis and can effectively identify patients who may need a CT scan, while being safer in selecting those with potential complicated diverticulitis.

Article Abstract

Purpose:  Diverticulitis is a common cause of abdominal pain and CT scan is commonly used for its diagnosis in the emergency department (ED). The diagnostic performance of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) integrated into a clinical exam for diverticulitis is still not established. We evaluate the accuracy of clinical-sonographic assessment for the diagnosis of diverticulitis and whether POCUS could improve the selection of patients needing CT scan for complicated diverticulitis.

Materials And Methods:  This is a multicentric observational study involving adult patients suspected of having diverticulitis presenting at 4 EDs. 21 sonographer physicians were asked to diagnose diverticulitis and complicated diverticulitis based on clinical-sonographic assessment. The final diagnosis was established by two reviewers, blinded to POCUS, based on data collected during the one-month follow-up comprehensive CT scan.

Results:  Among 393 enrolled patients, 218 (55.5 %) were diagnosed with diverticulitis and 33 (8 %) had complicated diverticulitis. The time to diagnosis by the sonographer physicians was shorter compared to standard care (97 ± 102 vs. 330 ± 319 minutes, p < 0.001). Clinical-sonographic assessment showed optimal sensitivity (92.7 %) and specificity (90.9 %) for diverticulitis. However, the sensitivity (50 %) for complicated diverticulitis was low. The sonographer physician would have proceeded to CT scan in 194 (49.4 %) patients and the CT scan request compared to the final diagnosis of complicated diverticulitis demonstrated 94 % sensitivity.

Conclusion:  Clinical-sonographic assessment is rapid and accurate for the diagnosis of diverticulitis. Even if POCUS has low sensitivity for complicated diverticulitis, it can be used to safely select patients needing CT.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1161-0780DOI Listing

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