Diagnostic accuracy of sonography for pleural effusion

systematic review

Authors

  • Alexandre Grimberg Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina
  • David Carlos Shigueoka Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina
  • Álvaro Nagib Atallah Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina
  • Sergio Ajzen Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina
  • Wagner Iared Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

Keywords:

Pleural effusion, Ultrasonography, Sensitivity and specificity, Review [Publication type], Meta-analysis [Publication type], Diagnostic imaging

Abstract

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE: The initial method for evaluating the presence of pleural effusion was chest radiography. Isolated studies have shown that sonography has greater accuracy than radiography for this diagnosis; however, no systematic reviews on this matter are available in the literature. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of sonography in detecting pleural effusion, by means of a systematic review of the literature. DESIGN AND SETTING: This was a systematic review with meta-analysis on accuracy studies. This study was conducted in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging and in the Brazilian Cochrane Center, Discipline of Emergency Medicine and Evidence-Based Medicine, Department of Medicine, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, Brazil. METHOD: The following databases were searched: Cochrane Library, Medline, Web of Science, Embase and Literatura Latino-Americana e do Caribe em Ciências da Saúde (Lilacs). The references of relevant studies were also screened for additional citations of interest. Studies in which the accuracy of sonography for detecting pleural effusion was tested, with an acceptable reference standard (computed tomography or thoracic drainage), were included. RESULTS: Four studies were included. All of them showed that sonography had high sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for detecting pleural effusions. The mean sensitivity was 93% (95% confidence interval, CI: 89% to 96%), and specificity was 96% (95% CI: 95% to 98%). CONCLUSIONS: In different populations and clinical settings, sonography showed consistently high sensitivity, specificity and accuracy for detecting fluid in the pleural space.

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Author Biographies

Alexandre Grimberg, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

MD. Radiologist in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina (Unifesp-EPM), São Paulo, Brazil.

David Carlos Shigueoka, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

PhD. Professor in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina (Unifesp-EPM), São Paulo, Brazil.

Álvaro Nagib Atallah, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

PhD. Full professor of the Discipline of Emergency Medicine and Evidence-Based Medicine, Department of Medicine, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola Paulista de Medicina (Unifesp-EPM), São Paulo, Brazil.

Sergio Ajzen, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

PhD. Full professor of the Department of Diagnostic Imaging, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina (Unifesp-EPM), São Paulo, Brazil.

Wagner Iared, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina

MD. Radiologist in the Department of Diagnostic Imaging and affiliated researcher at the Brazilian Cochrane Center, Universidade Federal de São Paulo — Escola Paulista de Medicina (Unifesp-EPM), São Paulo, Brazil.

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Published

2010-03-03

How to Cite

1.
Grimberg A, Shigueoka DC, Atallah Álvaro N, Ajzen S, Iared W. Diagnostic accuracy of sonography for pleural effusion: systematic review. Sao Paulo Med J [Internet]. 2010 Mar. 3 [cited 2025 Mar. 16];128(2):90-5. Available from: https://periodicosapm.emnuvens.com.br/spmj/article/view/1733

Issue

Section

Systematic Review