Repeatability and reproducibility of quantitative ultrasound cervical measurements in women at risk for preterm birth
Michelle Villegas-Downs, Ziyi Gao, Huizhu Jia, Aiguo Han, Barbara L. McFarlin, William D. O’Brien, Douglas G. Simpson

TL;DR
This study evaluates the reliability of ultrasound measurements in the cervix of pregnant women to monitor preterm birth risk.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on the repeatability and reproducibility of six quantitative ultrasound parameters in vivo.
Findings
AC and LF Midband showed moderate repeatability and reproducibility for potential clinical use.
LF Intercept and Kappa/Mu had poor reproducibility and need further refinement.
Transducer and phantom variances were not statistically significant.
Abstract
Transvaginal Quantitative Ultrasound (QUS) has the potential to enhance preterm birth risk monitoring during pregnancy but evidence on the reliability of commonly used QUS parameters in vivo is lacking. This study assesses intra-sonographer repeatability and inter-sonographer reproducibility of six different QUS measurements of the human cervix during pregnancy: Attenuation Coefficient (AC), Lizzi Feleppa (LF) Intercept, Midband and Slope, and Envelope Kappa and Mu. This prospective study was approved by the institutional review board at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Informed consent was obtained from all participants, who were selected from pregnant women enrolled in the single-center study, “QUS Technology for Identifying At-Risk Women for Spontaneous Preterm Birth.” They received a standard clinical transvaginal ultrasound scan followed by two research scans at 20 ± 2 and 24…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPreterm Birth and Chorioamnionitis · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
