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Standing Position Ultrasonography: Imaging Efficacy in Detecting Liver Diaphragmatic Dome Blind Area Lesions

5 maggio 2026 aggiornato da: Dezhi Zhang, The First Hospital of Jilin University

Study on the Imaging Efficacy of Standing Position Ultrasonography in Detecting Lesions Within the Blind Area Near the Diaphragmatic Dome of the Liver

Objective: To compare the detection efficacy of standing, supine, and left lateral decubitus ultrasonographic scanning for space-occupying lesions ≤3cm in the liver dome "blind area" and assess the feasibility of standing position as a routine scanning posture, providing a theoretical basis for optimizing liver ultrasound protocols.

Methods: Prospectively enrolled patients (CT/MRI-confirmed liver dome lesions) admitted to our Hepatobiliary-Pancreatic Department (Feb 2024-Feb 2025). Three sonographers, blinded to other positions' results, performed scans in standing, supine, and left lateral positions. Fleiss' kappa assessed inter-sonographer agreement. An image quality scoring system (0=not visible; 1=partially visible; 2=fully visible) was used by two blinded radiologists. Baseline data (sex, age, BMI), lesion location, size, type, and liver parenchymal status (normal, fatty liver, liver damage [diffuse disease/cirrhosis]) were recorded. Wilcoxon test compared display scores. Subgroup analyses evaluated confounding factors. A Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) model controlled repeated-measures bias, reporting ORs.

Panoramica dello studio

Stato

Completato

Descrizione dettagliata

Patient Collection:

Enroll patients hospitalized in our Hepatobiliary-Pancreatic Department between February 2024 and February 2025 with subphrenic liver lesions confirmed by CT or MRI. These patients underwent ultrasound examinations. Collect and record demographic data (sex, age, height, weight, BMI) and lesion characteristics (size, location, type, liver background).

Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Liver dome lesions (≤3 cm) confirmed by CT/MRI (plain + enhanced) within 6 months (for multiple lesions, include the one closest to the diaphragm);
  2. Superior border of lesion ≤1 cm from the diaphragm;
  3. Lesion size ≤3 cm.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Inability to cooperate with three-position ultrasound examination;
  2. Subcutaneous emphysema affecting ultrasound;
  3. Chilaiditi syndrome (interposition of colon).

Equipment & Methods

Equipment:

GE LOGIQ-E9 ultrasound system with C1-6-D low-frequency convex probe.

Procedure:

  1. Patients fasted for 2-3 hours and rested for 10-20 minutes before examination.
  2. Three scanning positions (Fig 2.1):

    • Supine: Arms raised above head, fully exposing intercostal/subcostal areas; back parallel to bed.

      • Left Lateral Decubitus: Arms raised, fully exposed intercostal/subcostal areas; side-facing away from examiner; back perpendicular to bed.

        • Standing: Arms raised, fully exposed intercostal/subcostal areas; upright with body axis vertical to floor.

Ultrasound Image Acquisition:

Three sonographers (>3 years' experience) randomly selected one position per patient. Scanning included intercostal/subcostal approaches. Patients cooperated with breathing/positioning. If a lesion was detected, the clearest image was saved; if not, no image was captured. Sonographers were blinded to lesion presence and prior CT/MRI results. Each sonographer left the room after scanning their assigned position.

Image Quality Evaluation:

Evaluation:

Two blinded radiologists (>3 years' experience) independently scored lesion visibility. Discrepancies were resolved by re-evaluation and consensus. Evaluators were blinded to patient position.

Scoring System:

  1. 2 = Fully visible: Clear lesion without gas/bone shadowing; complete margins; measurable size.
  2. 1 = Partially visible: Suboptimal visualization; obscured by gas/bone; incomplete margins; unmeasurable size.
  3. 0 = Not visible: Undetectable.

Sonographer Consistency Test:

20 randomly selected patients were re-scanned by all three sonographers across all positions. Each sonographer recorded lesion detectability per position.

Bias Control:

Selection Bias: Consecutive enrollment of eligible patients. Sonographer Bias: Blinded scanning; no prior knowledge of CT/MRI/history; Fleiss' kappa for inter-operator consistency.

Reader Bias: Independent blinded scoring with consensus for discrepancies.

Quality Control:

Strict adherence to protocol; trained/certified personnel; standardized data collection/entry/analysis; complete records; predefined statistical methods; unbiased reporting.

Statistical Analysis:

  1. SPSS 26.0 software. Fleiss' kappa assessed inter-sonographer agreement. Normally distributed data: mean±SD; non-normal: median (IQR). Friedman test compared scores across positions; Wilcoxon signed-rank test for pairwise comparisons. Significance: P<0.05.
  2. Subgroup Analysis: Stratified by BMI (normal/underweight, overweight/obese), liver background (normal, fatty liver, liver damage [diffuse disease/cirrhosis]), lesion location (S4, S7, S8), size (0-1 cm, 1.1-2.0 cm, 2.1-3.0 cm), and type (HCC, non-HCC). Non-parametric tests repeated per subgroup.
  3. Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE): Binary logistic model (patient ID as subject variable; outcome: complete visibility) with exchangeable working correlation matrix. Covariates: position (supine as reference), location (S8 as reference), liver background, lesion type, size, and BMI. Results: OR (95% CI). Sensitivity analysis compared exchangeable, AR1, and unstructured correlation matrices.

Tipo di studio

Osservativo

Iscrizione (Effettivo)

95

Contatti e Sedi

Questa sezione fornisce i recapiti di coloro che conducono lo studio e informazioni su dove viene condotto lo studio.

Luoghi di studio

    • Jilin
      • Changchun, Jilin, Cina, 130000
        • The First Hospital of Jilin University

Criteri di partecipazione

I ricercatori cercano persone che corrispondano a una certa descrizione, chiamata criteri di ammissibilità. Alcuni esempi di questi criteri sono le condizioni generali di salute di una persona o trattamenti precedenti.

Criteri di ammissibilità

Età idonea allo studio

  • Bambino
  • Adulto
  • Adulto più anziano

Accetta volontari sani

No

Metodo di campionamento

Campione di probabilità

Popolazione di studio

Enroll patients hospitalized in our Hepatobiliary-Pancreatic Department between February 2024 and February 2025 with subphrenic liver lesions confirmed by CT or MRI. These patients underwent ultrasound examinations. Collect and record demographic data (sex, age, height, weight, BMI) and lesion characteristics (size, location, type, liver background).

Descrizione

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Liver dome lesions (≤3 cm) confirmed by CT/MRI (plain + enhanced) within 6 months (for multiple lesions, include the one closest to the diaphragm);
  2. Superior border of lesion ≤1 cm from the diaphragm;
  3. Lesion size ≤3 cm.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Inability to cooperate with three-position ultrasound examination;
  2. Subcutaneous emphysema affecting ultrasound;
  3. Chilaiditi syndrome (interposition of colon).

Piano di studio

Questa sezione fornisce i dettagli del piano di studio, compreso il modo in cui lo studio è progettato e ciò che lo studio sta misurando.

Come è strutturato lo studio?

Dettagli di progettazione

Coorti e interventi

Gruppo / Coorte
Three scanning positions

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Liver dome lesions (≤3 cm) confirmed by CT/MRI (plain + enhanced) within 6 months (for multiple lesions, include the one closest to the diaphragm);
  2. Superior border of lesion ≤1 cm from the diaphragm;
  3. Lesion size ≤3 cm.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Inability to cooperate with three-position ultrasound examination;
  2. Subcutaneous emphysema affecting ultrasound;
  3. Chilaiditi syndrome (interposition of colon).

Equipment:

GE LOGIQ-E9 ultrasound system with C1-6-D low-frequency convex probe.

Procedure:

  1. Patients fasted for 2-3 hours and rested for 10-20 minutes before examination.
  2. Three scanning positions :

Supine: Arms raised above head, fully exposing intercostal/subcostal areas; back parallel to bed.

Left Lateral Decubitus: Arms raised, fully exposed intercostal/subcostal areas; side-facing away from examiner; back perpendicular to bed.

Standing: Arms raised, fully exposed intercostal/subcostal areas; upright with body axis vertical to floor.

Cosa sta misurando lo studio?

Misure di risultato primarie

Misura del risultato
Misura Descrizione
Lasso di tempo
Evaluation of Image Display Effects Under Three Body Positions
Lasso di tempo: The time from discovery of the space-occupying lesion to image acquisition was less than six months

Two ultrasound physicians, each with over three years of experience, independently evaluated the visibility of space-occupying lesions in the acquired images. If their initial assessments differed, they re-evaluated the images and reached a consensus through discussion. Both physicians were blinded to the patient's scanning position during evaluation.

Scoring Criteria:

A three-point scoring system was used to assess the visibility of lesions near the diaphragmatic dome (refer to Figures 2.2 and 2.3 for examples):

Score 2 (Fully Visible): The space-occupying lesion is clearly visualized without obscuration by gas or ribs. Margins are complete, and lesion size can be accurately measured.

Score 1 (Partially Visible): The space-occupying lesion is visualized suboptimally, obscured by gas or ribs. Margins are incomplete, and lesion size cannot be accurately measured.

Score 0 (Not Visible): The space-occupying lesion is completely undetectable.

The time from discovery of the space-occupying lesion to image acquisition was less than six months

Collaboratori e investigatori

Qui è dove troverai le persone e le organizzazioni coinvolte in questo studio.

Studiare le date dei record

Queste date tengono traccia dell'avanzamento della registrazione dello studio e dell'invio dei risultati di sintesi a ClinicalTrials.gov. I record degli studi e i risultati riportati vengono esaminati dalla National Library of Medicine (NLM) per assicurarsi che soddisfino specifici standard di controllo della qualità prima di essere pubblicati sul sito Web pubblico.

Studia le date principali

Inizio studio (Effettivo)

1 febbraio 2024

Completamento primario (Effettivo)

1 febbraio 2025

Completamento dello studio (Effettivo)

1 luglio 2025

Date di iscrizione allo studio

Primo inviato

5 maggio 2026

Primo inviato che soddisfa i criteri di controllo qualità

5 maggio 2026

Primo Inserito (Effettivo)

12 maggio 2026

Aggiornamenti dei record di studio

Ultimo aggiornamento pubblicato (Effettivo)

12 maggio 2026

Ultimo aggiornamento inviato che soddisfa i criteri QC

5 maggio 2026

Ultimo verificato

1 maggio 2026

Maggiori informazioni

Termini relativi a questo studio

Piano per i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)

Hai intenzione di condividere i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)?

NO

Informazioni su farmaci e dispositivi, documenti di studio

Studia un prodotto farmaceutico regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Studia un dispositivo regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Queste informazioni sono state recuperate direttamente dal sito web clinicaltrials.gov senza alcuna modifica. In caso di richieste di modifica, rimozione o aggiornamento dei dettagli dello studio, contattare register@clinicaltrials.gov. Non appena verrà implementata una modifica su clinicaltrials.gov, questa verrà aggiornata automaticamente anche sul nostro sito web .

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