Western Journal of Emergency Medicine (Feb 2024)

Diagnostic Accuracy of a Handheld Ultrasound vs a Cart-based Model: A Randomized Clinical Trial

  • Ryan C. Gibbons,
  • Daniel J. Jaeger,
  • Matthew Berger,
  • Mark Magee,
  • Claire Shaffer,
  • Thomas G. Costantino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/westjem.17822
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 2
pp. 268 – 274

Abstract

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Introduction: Numerous studies have demonstrated the accuracy of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS). Portable, handheld devices have expanded the clinical scope of POCUS at a fraction of the cost of traditional, cart-based models. There is a paucity of data assessing the diagnostic accuracy of portable devices. Our objective in this study was to compare the diagnostic accuracy of a portable device with a cart-based model. Methods: This was an institutional review board-approved, observational, prospective, randomized clinical trial (NCT05196776) of a convenience sample of adult patients who presented to a university-based health system. Patients who required a cardiac, lung, renal, aorta, or biliary POCUS were randomized to a portable device or to a cart-based model. We hypothesized that the cart-based model would have a 90% diagnostic accuracy vs 70% for the handheld device. To detect a 20% difference, the sample size was calculated to be 98, with 49 patients randomized to each arm. We used standard 2x2 tables to calculate test characteristics with 95% confidence intervals (CI). Results: A total of 110 patients were enrolled, with 56 patients randomized to the cart-based model and 54 to the handheld device. The sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of the cart-based vs handheld were 77.8% (40–97.2) vs 92.9% (66.1–99.8), 91.5% (79.6–97.6) vs 92.3% (79.1–98.4%), and 89.3% (78.1–96) vs 92.5% (81.8–97.9), respectively. Conclusion: The diagnostic accuracy of a portable, handheld device is similar to that of a cart-based model.