Abstract

BackgroundAccurate repeat assessment of the diameter of an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is important. This study investigated the reproducibility of different methods of measuring AAA diameter from ultrasound images.MethodsFifty AAA patients were assessed by ultrasound. Maximum AAA diameter was measured independently by three trained observers on two separate occasions using a standardised protocol. Five diameters were measured from each scan, three in the anterior–posterior (AP) and two in the transverse (TV) plane, including inner-to-inner (ITI), outer-to-outer (OTO) and leading edge-to-leading edge (LETLE). Intra- and inter-observer reproducibility were reported as reproducibility coefficients. Statistical comparison of methods was performed using linear mixed effects models.ResultsIntra-observer reproducibility coefficients (AP LETLE 2.2 mm; AP ITI 2.4 mm; AP OTO 2.6 mm) were smaller than inter-observer reproducibility coefficients (AP LETLE 4.6 mm: AP ITI 4.5; and AP OTO 4.8 mm). There was no statistically significant difference in intra-observer reproducibility of three types of measurements performed in the AP plane. Measurements obtained in the TV plane had statistically significant worse intra-observer reproducibility than those performed in the AP plane.ConclusionsThis study suggests that the comparison of maximum AAA diameter between repeat images is most reproducibly performed by a single trained observer measuring diameters in the AP plane.

Highlights

  • Accurate repeat assessment of the diameter of an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is important

  • Scans obtained in the anterior–posterior plane and with leading edge-to-leading-edge (LETLE) calliper placement had the lowest overall intra-observer reproducibility coefficient (± 2.2 mm), but this was not statistically significantly different from ITI and outer-to-outer diameter (OTO) calliper placement in the same plane

  • The current study found no statistically significant differences between different methods of calliper placement when only measurements obtained in the same plane as the ultrasound probe are considered

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate repeat assessment of the diameter of an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is important. This study investigated the reproducibility of different methods of measuring AAA diameter from ultrasound images. In clinical practice and most previous clinical trials ultrasound imaging has been used to estimate maximum AAA diameter [6, 10]. Despite the importance of Matthews et al Ultrasound J (2021) 13:13 accurate determination of AAA diameter, measurement protocols are often incompletely reported and vary in both plane of acquisition and calliper placement [11]. Disparate methods of calliper placement has been reported to cause differences of up to 5 mm in maximal AAA diameter with implications for decision-making regarding surgical repair and surveillance intervals which could impact on patient care [16, 17]. Three recent studies have compared these three methods of calliper placement, but had inconsistent findings [16,17,18]

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