Manual versus automatic bladder wall thickness measurements: a method comparison study

M. Oelke, C. Mamoulakis, D.T. Ubbink, J.J. de la Rosette, H. Wijkstra

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Purpose To compare repeatability and agreement of conventional ultrasound bladder wall thickness (BWT) measurements with automatically obtained BWT measurements by the BVM 6500 device. Methods Adult patients with lower urinary tract symptoms, urinary incontinence, or postvoid residual urine were urodynamically assessed. During two subsequent cystometry sessions the infusion pump was temporarily stopped at 150 and 250 ml bladder filling to measure BWT with conventional ultrasound and the BVM 6500 device. For each method and each bladder filling, repeatability and variation was assessed by the method of Bland and Altman. Results Fifty unselected patients (30 men, 20 women) aged 21-86 years (median 62.5 years) were prospectively evaluated. Invalid BWT measurements were encountered in 2.1-14% of patients when using the BVM 6500 versus 0% with conventional ultrasound (significant only during the second measurement at 150 ml bladder filling). Mean difference in BWT values between the measurements of one technique was -0.1 to +0.01 mm. Measurement variation between replicate measurements was smaller for conventional ultrasound and the smallest for 250 ml bladder filling. Mean difference between the two techniques was 0.11-0.23 mm and did not differ significantly. The BVM 6500 device was not able to correctly measure BWTs above 4 mm. Conclusions Both BWT measurements are repeatable and agree with each other. However, conventional ultrasound measurements have a smaller measurement variance, can measure BWT in all patients, and BWTs above 4 mm
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Pages (from-to)747-753
JournalWorld Journal of Urology
Volume27
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2009

Cite this