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. 2016 Jul 13;2016(7):CD012281. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012281

Koninckx 1996.

Study characteristics
Patient sampling Primary objectives To evaluate clinical examination during menstruation and plasma CA‐125 concentration to diagnose endometriosis
Study population Women scheduled for laparoscopy for suspected endometriosis
Selection criteria Exclusion criteria: hormonal treatment or medical treatment for endometriosis in the three months preceding laparoscopy, refusal for a clinical examination during menstruation (only DIE considered)
Study design Cross‐sectional single‐gate, prospective recruitment and collection of samples, consecutive series
Patient characteristics and setting Clinical presentation Infertility (n = 33), pain (n = 13), infertility + pain (n = 6), hydrosalpinx (n = 1), ovarian cyst (n= 2)
Age Range 20 ‐ 45 years (personal communication with the author)
Number of participants enrolled 61 women
Number of participants available for analysis 55 women (only DIE or endometrioma or severe pelvic adhesions included; all in menstrual, follicular and early luteal phase of menstrual cycle)
Setting Division of endoscopic surgery, University Hospital Gasthiusberg, University of Leuven
Place of study Leuven, Belgium
Period of study Not stated
Language English
Index tests Index test Clinical examination in menstrual phase (menstrual nodularities) + CA‐125 in mid follicular phase
Details of the index test procedure as stated Clinical examination included pelvic bimanual examination with careful assessment of pelvic nodularities and their tenderness; CA‐125 assay using a second generation IRMA kit (CA‐125 II, Centocor, Malvern, Pa; all kits from the same production batch)
Threshold for positive result Clinical examination ‐ presence of induration (with one or more small nodules) or painful nodularities (larger spherical nodule), pre‐specified and described in details; CA‐125 >35 U/ml, not pre‐specified
Examiners Clinical examination: one of the two authors, always preoperatively and hence blinded to the results of reference standard; CA‐125 ‐ no information provided; unclear if were blinded to reference standard
Interobserver variability CA‐125: intra‐and inter‐assay variation < 5% and < 8%
Target condition and reference standard(s) Target condition DIE, ovarian endometrioma or severe pelvic adhesions
Prevalence of target condition in the sample n = 38/55 (69%): stage I‐II 29, stage III‐IV 9; DIE 13, endometrioma 9, deep endometriosis + severe cul de sac adhesions + endometrioma 24; controls n = 17)
Reference standard Laparoscopy n = 55 (100%)
Description of positive case definition by reference standard test as reported Visual inspection, deep endometriosis classified as type I ‐ III, reference to the source with diagnostic criteria and described; staging according to the rAFS classification .
Examiners Not stated; unclear if were blinded to the result of pelvic examination
Flow and timing Time interval between index test and reference standard The tests were performed within four months before surgery (personal communication with the author)
Withdrawals In six women (11%) the surgery was cancelled for various reasons
Comparative  
Key conclusions by the authors Clinical examination during menstruation can diagnose reliably deep endometriosis, cystic ovarian endometriosis or cul de sac adhesions. This test, preferentially combined with a follicular phase CA‐125 assay, should be used to decide whether a preparation for bowel surgery should be given
Conflict of interest Not reported
Notes The reported diagnostic estimates for blood biomarker alone are presented in other reviews from this series
The presented diagnostic estimates are for DIE or ovarian endometrioma or severe cul de sac adhesions
Methodological quality
Item Authors' judgement Risk of bias Applicability concerns
DOMAIN 1: Patient Selection
Was a consecutive or random sample of patients enrolled? Yes    
Did the study avoid inappropriate exclusions? Yes    
Was a 'two‐gate' design avoided? Yes    
    Low High
DOMAIN 2: Index Test All tests
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? Unclear    
If a threshold was used, was it pre‐specified? No    
Was a cycle phase considered in interpretation of the result of index test? Yes    
Did the study provide a clear pre‐specified definition of what was considered to be a positive result of index test?      
Was the index test performed by a single operator or interpreted by consensus in a joint session?      
Were the same clinical data available when the index test results were interpreted as would be available when the test is used in practice?      
    High Low
DOMAIN 3: Reference Standard
Is the reference standards likely to correctly classify the target condition? Yes    
Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index tests? Unclear    
    Unclear Low
DOMAIN 4: Flow and Timing
Was there an appropriate interval between index test and reference standard? Yes    
Did all patients receive the same reference standard? Yes    
Were all patients included in the analysis? No    
    High