Introduction
Diagnosis of bladder outlet obstruction (BOO) in women has become a challenge in Urology. The prevalence is reported in 2-23% and it is expected to be ascending.1 There are some nomograms accepted for men, none of these are applicable for women because the etiological factors for BOO are diverse. The voiding in females are more complex due to mobility of the bladder neck, proximal urethra and pelvic floor movements.
BOO in women is defined by the International Continence Society (ICS) as: “a reduced urine flow rate and/or presence of a raised post void residual and an increased detrusor pressure.”2 Voiding symptoms such as weak urinary stream and sense of incomplete emptying are suggestive of BOO. Complete urodynamic evaluation is needed to confirm the diagnosis.
The absence of a well identified etiology and the lack of a universal agreement in urodynamic diagnosis has resulted in many definitions for BOO exclusively in women.3 The aim of our study is to compare different definitions for BOO in women, to find the most specific and sensitive.
Materials and methods
After institutional review board approval, clinical files from our urodynamic database from women diagnosed with DV from 2017-2020 were reviewed. Studies that didn’t fulfilled the good quality data according to ICS standards were excluded.4 The selected studies were classified as obstructed or not based on Farrar (Qmax<15 ml/s and Vol >200 ml),5 Chassagne (Qmax ≤15 ml/s and PdetQmax >20 cmH20),6 Lemack (Qmax <11 ml/s y PdetQmax >21 cmH20),7 Defreitas (Qmax < 12 ml/s or PdetQmax >25 cmH20),8 Blavais and Groutz (PdetQmax > Qmax + 7),9 Solomon-Greenwell (PdetQmax > 2.2 Qmax + 5).10
As there is not a gold standard, the control group were women who had been classified as obstructed with at least 3 definitions of BOO. Likelihood positive ratio, sensitivity and specificity were calculated. Statistical analysis was carried out by IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 23.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, N.Y., USA). A p <0.5 was considered statistically significant.
Results
We analyzed 146 cases, 79 meet the quality criteria for assessment (15 cases were excluded due to underactive bladder). Fifty cases were categorized with obstruction and 29 without.
Farrar, Chassagne and Lemack showed high specificity. In contrast, Defreitas, Blaivas and Groutz high sensitivity. Solomon-Greenwell nomogram was the most specific and sensitive, obtaining the highest likelihood positive ratio >100 (Table 1)
Discussion
The urodynamic assessment provides critical data for management for patients with BOO. The definitions of BOO in woman use different parameters cut-offs resulting in a variety of sensitivity and sensibility. This study has shown that Solomon-Greenwell nomogram had a useful diagnostic value for BOO, providing the highest sensitivity and specificity, compared with the other definitions. Chassagne and Defreitas have qualitative criteria and no arithmetic operations, making it easier to be applied. Blaivas and Groutz proposed a visual nomogram, due to its simplicity has been the most acknowleged. Nevertheless, adequate training for the interpretation of urodynamic studies and its quality control are essential for the application of any definition.
Solomon Greenwell nomogram proved an excellent level of agreement compared with radiographic evidence against different urodynamic definitions.11 We found similar results in our study, however, recent studies have shown that the sensitivity of the Solomon-Greenwell nomogram for detecting female BOO was not satisfactory.12 This could be explained due to the different etiologies of the obstruction.
We acknowledge several limitations of our study, this was a retrospective study and etiologies of the obstruction were not categorized, we did not discriminate if the obstruction was for functional or anatomic causes. We didn´t used videourodynamics as gold standard. We assumed obstruction in patients that fulfilled the criteria of at least three definitions of BOO as the control group.
The ideal operational definition should be simple to apply, based on reliable data obtained from the pressure-flow profile in order to avoid subjectivity. In case some arithmetic calculations are performed, should be as simplified. Larger studies with adequate methodological quality are required, also categorized by specific cause.