Back to bedside: Renal point-of-care ultrasonography (POCUS) by internal medicine resident physicians for identification of hydronephrosis in patients with acute kidney injury.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-11-2025

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Point-of-care ultrasonography (POCUS) has rapidly emerged as a valuable diagnostic tool in various medical conditions, including acute kidney injury (AKI) in the Western healthcare system. Its utility in the Middle East and Asian healthcare setups remains under-explored. This study aimed to assess the effectiveness of POCUS, performed by internal medicine residents (IMRs), in diagnosing hydronephrosis in AKI patients at a tertiary care training hospital in Qatar.

METHODS: We conducted a pilot prospective cross-sectional study from June 2021 to September 2021, enrolling adult patients admitted with AKI in the acute medical assessment unit (AMAU) via convenience sampling. IMRs received mandatory POCUS training (including a 30-minute didactic teaching session and supervised performance of renal POCUS scans). The primary outcome was the detection of hydronephrosis, with findings compared to departmental renal ultrasound scans performed by the radiologists.

RESULTS: Fifty patients were included, with POCUS identifying hydronephrosis in five out of nine patients with confirmed hydronephrosis via official departmental renal ultrasound, demonstrating a sensitivity of 83.3% and specificity of 93% for POCUS performed by IMRs. Hydronephrosis via bedside POCUS scans had clinically reliable positive and negative predictive values (55.6% and 98%, respectively). Cohen's kappa was 0.7 (0.45-0.94), indicating substantial agreement. One patient whose renal POCUS was reported as normal by IMR was identified to have hydronephrosis on an official departmental renal ultrasound.

CONCLUSION: This study demonstrated the effectiveness of adequate training in improving the diagnostic skills of residents using POCUS for bedside detection of hydronephrosis in patients with AKI in a residency program from the Middle East. Residency programs that include POCUS training have the potential to significantly increase bedside diagnostic capabilities with improved quality of training and patient care.

Publication Title

Qatar Med J

Volume

2025

Issue

2

First Page

36

Last Page

36

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