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The Radiological Approach to the Patient
With Hematuria
Written by: Jeffrey
H. Newhouse, M.D.
May 1, 2001
INTRODUCTION
Hematuria is a frequent complaint, and a common reason to refer
patients for imaging studies. Choosing which patients with hematuria
to image and which modalities to use is importantnot only
from the standpoint of practicing good medicinebut also from
the need for cost-effectiveness. It is odd that the literature does
not seem to contain a firm consensus on whom to image and how; this
essay will review the current state of the radiological art, and
try to form recommendations.
For the purposes of this discussion, only adult patients will be
considered. Patients in whom hematuria coexists with symptoms or
signs which strongly suggest urinary tract stones, infection, or
trauma, will not be discussed, nor will second-step imaging maneuvers
(if initial techniques reveal lesions that need to be further characterized).
WHO TO IMAGE
In most practices, of course, the selection of patients to be
imaged is not made by radiologists; instead, the population consists
of patients referred by others. Nevertheless, it might be worthwhile
to discuss appropriate selection of patients, not only for the education
of our colleagues, but to encourage appropriate practice patterns.
It would be easy to say simply that all patients with hematuria,
or all patients with gross hematuria, or some other easily-defined
group, should be imaged; unfortunately, the reality may not be so
simple.
Very large numbers of patients have microscopic hematuria at one
point or another in their lives, and have no detectable disease.
It may be more of a semantic point to decide whether hematuria in
these patients is "normal," but asymptomatic microscopic
hematuria can be found so often in randomly screened populations,
and the presumed yield of investigating them so low, that the cost-benefit
ratio for a practice that images all patients with any degree
of hematuria would be huge. Nevertheless, the most widely cited
textbook on urology recommends such a practice, stating that any
degree of hematuria, no matter how minor, raises the likelihood
of malignancy and therefore a full work-up, including imaging, is
mandatory. But at least one other paper, citing data from a very
large population of screened patients, suggests that work-up may
be necessary in very few (see references). With these disparate
views, deciding how to practice can be difficult.
It might seem intuitive that gross hematuria is more likely to
reflect important disease than microscopic hematuria but, even though
that may be true, microscopic hematuria indicates important disease
(at least in certain populations) sufficiently often that it cannot
be ignored simply because it is not gross.
The referral sources of the particular patients are important to
consider. The prevalence of important disease in a population with
asymptomatic microhematuria may be relatively low in patients who
are periodically screened by generalists. Those who are sent from
urology practices are likely to have a higher prevalence of disease,
presumably because some characteristic, in addition to the hematuria,
motivated the generalists to send the patient to the urologist in
the first place.
Certain simple and inexpensive methods may be used to identify
patients who should definitely be imaged. Positive or indeterminate
urinary cytology, family history of urological malignancy, smoking,
exposure to certain chemicals, and symptoms of specific urological
malignancies unquestionably require imaging. At the other extreme,
young women with hematuria and cystitis, in whom the hematuria permanently
resolves after treatment for the cystitis, may not need upper tract
imaging. Patients with a single episode of hematuria following strenuous
exercise may not absolutely require imaging if subsequent urinalyses
show no red cells whatsoever. Patients with clinical and laboratory
evidence of pure glomerular disease causing hematuria may not need
urological imaging. However, renal ultrasound to determine size
and parenchymal thickness, and chest radiography, are often called
for in patients with glomerulonephritis.
Although anticoagulation therapy might be considered a cause of
bleeding in patients without urological disease, investigations
of this population suggest that hematuria may indeed reflect
important urological diseaseincluding malignancywith
sufficient frequency that dismissing it may not be prudent.
WHICH MODALITY TO CHOOSE
The question of which modality to use has received sporadic
attention in the literature, but firm evidence favoring one in particular
is not available. Up until several years ago, comparisons usually
dealt with excretory urography and its several variations, transabdominal
ultrasonography, and simple radiography. It might be expected that
ultrasound would be better than urography in detecting cysts and
small solid renal neoplasms that project from the anterior or posterior
aspects of the kidney, and that excretory urography would be better
at finding small flat lesions in the collecting system and ureter,
but, although there are small series and anecdotal cases in the
literature, firm support of these suppositions is not apparent.
In any case, sonography performed for hematuria should probably
be accompanied by radiography to find small stones (especially in
the mid-ureter) which ultrasound might miss. Lack of firm evidence
in the literature is due to several factors, including the difficulty
of determining false-negative rates for any modality, sensitivity
and specificity for individual diseases which have low prevalence,
the definition of the population examined, the technical protocol,
and so forth.
Whichever modality is chosen, it was (and remains) standard practice
to perform cystoscopy in patients needing investigation. This is
because both urography and ultrasound may fail to detect small flat
inflammatory or neoplastic lesions in the bladder, however successful
they might be in finding polypoid intraluminal lesions.
More recently, variations on techniques using computed tomography
have been described and are rapidly becoming more popular. "CT
urography" is the phrase which has become attached to these
techniques, which always include CT (usually pre- and post- intravenous
contrast) followed by some sort of pyeloureterography. The latter
may be performed by one the following techniques:
- reformatting CT images obtained during the excretory phase
- using CT scout views
- moving the patient from a CT scanner to a radiography facility
where pyeloureterography may be performed
- performing the CT immediately after a standard excretory urogram.
There have not been a sufficient number of large studies to determine
which of these various techniques is best, and they continue to
be evaluated. Until valid results are available, it would be prudent
to assume that CT is the most sensitive and specific examination
for detecting conditions which produce renal masses and renal cysts.
CT should also be relatively accurate in finding medium-sized or
large polypoid lesions in the hollow portions of the urinary tract,
but it is unclear whether CTreformatted or notcan detect
small flat urothelial lesions, or diseases (such as mild papillary
necrosis or medullary sponge kidney without calcifications) which
produce very small anatomical abnormalities. Film-screen (or direct
digital) pyeloureterography is likely to be as accurate after a
CT study as it is during excretory urography. I suspect that within
a very few years radiologists will determine whether the shift to
CT urography is warranted.
MR urography should, at least in theory, match CT for detection
of renal masses and the capacity to use reformatted images to create
pyelouretograms. This examination is costly, however, and it remains
uncertain whether the entire urinary tract can be imaged with sufficient
spatial resolution to challenge CT urography.
If hematuria persists after initial cystoscopy and imaging, the
next step can be problematic. Arteriography may reveal small arteriovenous
malformations or other vascular abnormalities which bleed, but the
prevalence of arteriovenous malformations is low, as is that of
arteritis in patients who exhibit no abnormalities other than hematuria.
Flexible ureteroscopes are becoming easier to use and less traumatic,
so that patients whose ureters and collecting systems are not ideally
visualized may have abnormalities revealed by this device.
CONCLUSION
Many adults with hematuria, either microscopic or gross,
require imaging work-up. Only in specific circumstances, in which
hematuria permanently resolves, may imaging be forgone. There is
an ongoing switch from excretory urography and ultrasound to variations
of CT urography; validation of these techniques is in progress.
Cystoscopy maintains a role in the work-up of patients with hematuria,
angiography is rarely necessary, and MR urography remains experimental.
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