Title of article :
Accuracy of Ultrasound in Diagnosis of Pneumothorax: A Comparison between Neonates and Adults—A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Author/Authors :
Dahmarde, Hamid Department of Radiology - Faculty of Medicine - Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, Iran , Parooie, Fateme Students Research Committee - Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Zabol, Iran , Salarzaei, Morteza Students Research Committee - Zabol University of Medical Sciences, Zabol, Iran
Abstract :
Objective. The present systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted to investigate the accuracy of ultrasound in the
diagnosis of pneumothorax in neonates and adults. Method. The searches were conducted by two independent researchers (MS
and HD) to find the relevant studies published from 01/01/2009 until the end of 01/01/2019. We searched for published literature
in the English language in MEDLINE via PubMed, Embase™ via ovid, the Cochrane Library, and Trip database. For literature
published in other languages, we searched national databases (Magiran and SID), KoreaMed, and LILACS, and we searched
OpenGrey (http://www.opengrey.eu/) and the World Health Organization Clinical Trials Registry (http://who.int/ictrp) for
unpublished literature and ongoing studies. The keywords used in the search strategy were pneumothorax or ultrasound or chest
ultrasonography or neonate or adult or aerothorax or sensitivity or specificity or diagnostic accuracy. The list of previous study
resources and systematic reviews was also searched for identifying the published studies (MS and HD). Analyses were performed
using Meta-Disc 1.4. Results. In total, 1,565 patients (255 neonates, 1212 adults, and 101 pediatrics suspected of pneumothorax)
were investigated in 10 studies. The overall specificity of chest ultrasound in the diagnosis of pneumothorax in both populations of
adults and neonates was 85.1% at the confidence interval of 95 percent (95% CI 81.1%–88.5%). At the confidence interval of 95
percent, the sensitivity was 98.6% (95% CI 97.7%–99.2%). The diagnostic odds ratio was 387.72 (95% CI 76.204–1972.7). For the
diagnosis of pneumothorax in neonates, the ultrasound sensitivity was 96.7% at the confidence interval of 95 percent (95% CI
88.3%–99.6%). At the confidence interval of 95 percent, the specificity was 100% (95% CI 97.7%–100%). For the diagnosis of
pneumothorax in adults, the ultrasound sensitivity was 82.9% at the confidence interval of 95 percent (95% CI 78.3–86.9%). At the
confidence interval of 95 percent, the specificity was 98.2% (95% CI 97.0%–99.0%). The diagnostic odds ratio was 423.13 (95% CI
45.222–3959.1). Analyzing studies indicated that the sensitivity of “absence lung sliding” sign for the diagnosis of pneumothorax
was 87.2% (95% CI 77.7–93.7), and specificity was 99.4% (95% CI 96.5%–100%). DOR was 556.74 (95% CI 100.03–3098.7). The
sensitivity of “lung point” sign for the diagnosis of pneumothorax was 82.1% (95% CI 71.7%–89.8%), and the specificity was 100%
(at the confidence interval of 95% CI 97.6%–100%). DOR was 298.0 (95% CI 58.893–1507.8). Conclusion. The diagnosis of
pneumothorax using ultrasound is accurate and reliable; additionally, it can result in timely diagnoses specifically in neonatal
pneumothorax. Using this method facilitates the therapy process; lack of ionizing radiation and easy operation are benefits of this
imaging technique.
Keywords :
Ultrasound , Pneumothorax , Comparison , Neonates , Adults
Journal title :
Canadian Respiratory Journal