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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Oct 30.
Published in final edited form as: Adv Surg. 2013;47:299–328. doi: 10.1016/j.yasu.2013.03.003

Table 2.

Selected studies evaluating diagnostic performance of US, from 1994 to 2009

Reference Study design N Sensitivity (%) Specificity (%)
Balthazar et al [60], 1994 Prospective. Consecutive patients, age 15–82 y, with “suggestive but not typical clinical and laboratory findings of appendicitis” evaluated by both CT and US. Clinical follow-up for nonsurgical patients. 100 76 91
Horton et al [25], 2000 Prospective. Patients, age 18–65 y, with possible appendicitis but missing 1 or more classic clinical findings. Subjects randomized to CT or US. No description of follow-up protocol for nonsurgical patients. 40 (US) 76 90
Dilley et al [27], 2001 Retrospective review of all rule-out appendicitis US cross-referenced to surgical and pathology reports. Pediatric patients. Study includes repeat US. No description of follow-up protocol for nonsurgical patients. 2056 89a
93b
95a
95b
Lowe et al [89], 2001 Retrospective. Consecutive children with suspected appendicitis underwent CT and compared with a historical cohort of consecutive children who underwent US. 12 children with negative imaging studies lost to follow-up and excluded. 78 (US) 100 88
Rettenbacher et al [66], 2002 Prospective. Patients, age 5–92 y, with suspected appendicitis. All underwent US. Clinical follow-up for nonsurgical patients. 350 98c
97d
98c
100d
Poortman et al [64], 2003 Prospective. Adult and pediatric patients with suspected appendicitis. Subjects underwent both US and CT. For nonsurgical patients median follow-up was 13 mo. 226 79 78
Kessler et al [68], 2004 Prospective. Patients, age 15–83 y, with suspected appendicitis. Follow-up in nonsurgical patients was chart review and telephone call at least 6 mo from discharge. Specific US findings were evaluated for diagnostic performance. Appendiceal diameter ≥6 mm was most sensitive and specific finding for appendicitis; sensitivity and specificity for this finding reported here. 125 98 98
Keyzer et al [62], 2005 Prospective. Patients, age 16–81 y, referred for CT for suspected appendicitis; all patients underwent both CT and US. Follow-up obtained from medical record and telephone call at 1 mo. 94 77 87
Doria et al [61], 2006 Meta-analysis (adults): study design described in text. N/A 83e 93e
Doria et al [61], 2006 Meta-analysis (children): study design described in text. N/A 88f 94f
Gaitini et al [65], 2008 Retrospective. Adult patients with suspected appendicitis. 132 patients also underwent CT. Clinical follow-up (inpatient only) for nonsurgical patients; indeterminate results excluded from analysis (n = 17). 420 74 97
Poortman et al [63], 2009 Prospective. Adult patients with symptoms of appendicitis underwent US followed by CT for negative or indeterminate US. Clinical follow-up and inpatient observation for nonsurgical patients. 151 (US) 77 86

In the Dilley article, sensitivity and specificity were calculated for all (initial and repeat) US examinations performed during the studya and recalculatedb based only on final US findings (ie, the initial US if the findings were conclusive, or the definitive US in those patients who had multiple studies). In the study by Rettenbacher and colleagues, sensitivity and specificity were calculated for appendicitisc and for appendicitis + alternative diagnosis. d Doria and colleagues calculated 95% CIs for their performance metrics: esensitivity 95% CI 78%–87%, specificity 95% CI 90%–96%, fsensitivity 95% CI 86%–90%, specificity 95% CI 92%–95%.

Abbreviation: N/A, not applicable.