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Published in: Abdominal Radiology 11/2021

01-11-2021 | Cholecystitis | Practice

CT findings and outcomes of acute cholecystitis: is additional ultrasound necessary?

Authors: Daniel Lee, Scott Appel, Linda Nunes

Published in: Abdominal Radiology | Issue 11/2021

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Abstract

Background

While ultrasound is often the preferred imaging modality for suspected acute cholecystitis (AC), CT is often the first line study when patients are being evaluated for abdominal pain. The diagnostic value of CT in the setting of AC is controversial, given the prevalent use of additional imaging.

Purpose

To evaluate the positive predictive value (PPV) of CT for diagnosing acute cholecystitis (AC) when used as a first line imaging study for evaluating abdominal pain and assess if additional imaging with ultrasound studies provides additional clinically useful information.

Materials and methods

Abnormal gallbladder findings in CT imaging studies were queried in a retrospective study over a 25-month period within a large urban health system. Sonographic (US) studies performed within 72 h of the initial CT were also included. Outcomes were determined by surgical pathology, fluid analysis, and clinical outcomes. Cases were stratified by the interpreting radiologist’s subjective confidence level of diagnosing AC, and the PPVs were compared between cases using CT without US and cases with both CT and US.

Results

Of the 468 CT studies meeting criteria, 192 were read as concerning for AC. PPV of CT was 44.7% without US and 50.5% when US was positive, which amounted to an insignificant gain (p = 0.41). When subdividing by confidence level, high-confidence positive CTs demonstrated no significant difference without ultrasound (80%) compared to with ultrasound (75%). Less confident reads in CT demonstrated potential gain from ultrasound; in the case of a “probable” CT impression, PPV increased from 45% without US to 90% with a high-confidence ultrasound impression.

Conclusion

Based on current practice within a large health system, CT examinations with high suspicion for AC demonstrated little gain from follow-up ultrasound. However, ultrasound may be of benefit when CT interpretations are less confident but still suspicious for AC.
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Metadata
Title
CT findings and outcomes of acute cholecystitis: is additional ultrasound necessary?
Authors
Daniel Lee
Scott Appel
Linda Nunes
Publication date
01-11-2021
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Abdominal Radiology / Issue 11/2021
Print ISSN: 2366-004X
Electronic ISSN: 2366-0058
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00261-021-03160-2

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