Rodriguez Esequiel, Skarecky Douglas, Narula Navneet, Ahlering Thomas E
Department of Urology, University of California-Irvine, Irvine Medical Center, Orange, California, USA.
J Urol. 2008 Feb;179(2):501-3. doi: 10.1016/j.juro.2007.09.083.
Historically estimating prostate volume by transrectal ultrasound underestimates actual prostate weight. We quantified and determined whether trends could be identified to predict or understand the underestimation.
The characteristics transrectal ultrasound volume, pathological prostate weight and dimensions in 181 patients were entered into an electronic spread sheet. Pathological and transrectal ultrasound volume was estimated using the standard ellipsoid formula, width x height x length x pi/6. In 87 of the 181 cases transrectal ultrasound dimensions were compared to pathological dimensions.
Using pathologically determined dimensions the ellipsoid formula accurately (+/-10%) predicted weight in 26.5% of the cases vs 13.3% by ultrasound. Transrectal ultrasound underestimated it by greater than 30% in 55% of cases and overestimated (greater than 10%) it in only 6.4%. Small vs large gland weight did not predict less underestimation. For prostate weight less than 30, 30 to 60 and more than 60 gm transrectal ultrasound underestimated by greater than 20% in 22.2%, 24.7% and 25.7% of cases, respectively. Paired analysis of transrectal ultrasound measurements and pathological dimensions revealed that transrectal ultrasound length was accurate (4.4 vs 4.3 cm) and had a good correlation with prostate weight. Height was underestimated (3.2 vs 3.7 cm) but it correlated with weight. Width was inaccurate (4.8 vs 5.2 cm) and it correlated poorly with weight. Age, prostate specific antigen, stage, Gleason score, American Urological Association symptom score and body mass index were not predictive of the underestimation. Displaced water volume in cc per prostate weight in gm showed a correlation of 0.997.
The primary underlying factor for inconsistency with volume estimation of prostate weight appears to be the ellipsoid formula since pathologically determined dimensions still had a 75% error. Independent of gland size the transrectal ultrasound correlation underestimated weight 80% of the time by greater than 30% in 55% of patients. Contrary to previous reports, transrectal ultrasound width and not length is the least reliable factor.
以往经直肠超声估算前列腺体积会低估实际前列腺重量。我们进行了量化并确定是否能找出可预测或理解这种低估情况的趋势。
将181例患者的经直肠超声体积、病理前列腺重量及尺寸特征录入电子表格。病理和经直肠超声体积采用标准椭球体公式(宽×高×长×π/6)估算。在181例中的87例中,将经直肠超声尺寸与病理尺寸进行比较。
使用病理确定的尺寸,椭球体公式在26.5%的病例中准确(±10%)预测重量,而经超声预测的准确率为13.3%。经直肠超声在55%的病例中低估超过30%,仅在6.4%的病例中高估(超过10%)。腺体重量大小并不能预测低估程度较小。对于前列腺重量小于30克、30至60克和大于60克的情况,经直肠超声分别在22.2%、24.7%和25.7%的病例中低估超过20%。经直肠超声测量与病理尺寸的配对分析显示,经直肠超声的长度准确(4.4厘米对4.3厘米)且与前列腺重量有良好相关性。高度被低估(3.2厘米对3.7厘米)但与重量相关。宽度不准确(4.8厘米对5.2厘米)且与重量相关性差。年龄、前列腺特异性抗原、分期、Gleason评分、美国泌尿外科学会症状评分和体重指数均不能预测这种低估情况。每克前列腺重量的置换水体积(立方厘米)显示相关性为0.997。
前列腺重量体积估算不一致的主要潜在因素似乎是椭球体公式,因为病理确定尺寸仍有75%的误差。与腺体大小无关,经直肠超声相关性在55%的患者中80%的时间低估重量超过30%。与先前报道相反,经直肠超声宽度而非长度是最不可靠的因素。