Diagnostic accuracy of salivary gland ultrasonography with different scoring systems in Sjögren’s syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS(2018)

Cited 24|Views3
No score
Abstract
Noninvasive objective salivary gland ultrasonography (SGU) had been widely used to evaluate major salivary gland involvement in primary Sjögren’s syndrome (pSS) and treatment responses. However, the evaluation score, diagnostic sensitivity, and diagnostic specificity significantly varied among clinical studies. We conducted this meta-analysis to assess the diagnostic accuracy of different SGU scoring systems using the American-European Consensus Group criteria. Of the 1301 articles retrieved from six databases, 24 met the criteria for quality assessment and 14 for meta-analyses. The pooled sensitivities were 75% (0–4) with I 2 = 92.0%, 84% (0–16) with I 2 = 63.6%, and 75% (0–48) with I 2 = 90.9%; the pooled specificities were 93% (0–4) with I 2 = 71.5%, 88% (0–16) with I 2 = 65.4%, and 95% (0–48) with I 2 = 83.9%; the pooled diagnostic odds ratios were 71.26 (0–4) with I 2 = 0%, 46.3 (0–16) with I 2 = 73.8%, and 66.07 (0–48) I 2 = 0%; the areas under the SROC curves were 0.95 (0–4), 0.93 (0–16), and 0.94 (0–48). These results indicated that the 0–4 scoring system has a higher specificity and a less heterogeneity than other systems, and could be used as a universal SGU diagnostic standard.
More
Translated text
Key words
Salivary Gland Ultrasonography (SGU),AECG Criteria,Summary Receiver Operating Characteristic (SROC),American-European Consensus Group (AECG),SROC Curve
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined