Ultrasonographic Diagnosis of Biliary Atresia Based on a Decision-Making Tree Model.
10.3348/kjr.2015.16.6.1364
- Author:
So Mi LEE
1
;
Jung Eun CHEON
;
Young Hun CHOI
;
Woo Sun KIM
;
Hyun Hye CHO
;
In One KIM
;
Sun Kyoung YOU
Author Information
1. Department of Radiology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul 03080, Korea. cheonje@snu.ac.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Neonatal jaundice;
Biliary atresia;
US;
Decision trees
- MeSH:
Area Under Curve;
Biliary Atresia/*diagnosis/ultrasonography;
Common Bile Duct/ultrasonography;
Decision Making;
Diagnosis, Differential;
Female;
Gallbladder/ultrasonography;
Hepatic Artery/ultrasonography;
Humans;
Infant;
Infant, Newborn;
Jaundice, Obstructive/complications/diagnosis;
Logistic Models;
Male;
Portal Vein/ultrasonography;
ROC Curve;
Retrospective Studies;
Sensitivity and Specificity
- From:Korean Journal of Radiology
2015;16(6):1364-1372
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: To assess the diagnostic value of various ultrasound (US) findings and to make a decision-tree model for US diagnosis of biliary atresia (BA). MATERIALS AND METHODS: From March 2008 to January 2014, the following US findings were retrospectively evaluated in 100 infants with cholestatic jaundice (BA, n = 46; non-BA, n = 54): length and morphology of the gallbladder, triangular cord thickness, hepatic artery and portal vein diameters, and visualization of the common bile duct. Logistic regression analyses were performed to determine the features that would be useful in predicting BA. Conditional inference tree analysis was used to generate a decision-making tree for classifying patients into the BA or non-BA groups. RESULTS: Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that abnormal gallbladder morphology and greater triangular cord thickness were significant predictors of BA (p = 0.003 and 0.001; adjusted odds ratio: 345.6 and 65.6, respectively). In the decision-making tree using conditional inference tree analysis, gallbladder morphology and triangular cord thickness (optimal cutoff value of triangular cord thickness, 3.4 mm) were also selected as significant discriminators for differential diagnosis of BA, and gallbladder morphology was the first discriminator. The diagnostic performance of the decision-making tree was excellent, with sensitivity of 100% (46/46), specificity of 94.4% (51/54), and overall accuracy of 97% (97/100). CONCLUSION: Abnormal gallbladder morphology and greater triangular cord thickness (> 3.4 mm) were the most useful predictors of BA on US. We suggest that the gallbladder morphology should be evaluated first and that triangular cord thickness should be evaluated subsequently in cases with normal gallbladder morphology.