Objective: To determine whether measurements of blood flow in endometrial and uterine vessels by transvaginal color Doppler ultrasonography was valuable in the diagnosis of a neoplastic endometrial pathology (hyperplasia and carcinoma) in women with abnormal bleeding.
Methods: This is a prospective study and included 105 post-menopausal women and 33 pre-menopausal women with abnormal uterine bleeding. All subjects underwent transvaginal color Doppler ultrasonography. We investigated whether obtained results were correlated with histopathological findings.
Results: There was no significant difference in the mean+/-S.D. RI of the left and the right uterine arteries, intramyometrial arteries and endometrial arteries between patients with neoplastic and non-neoplastic endometrium on histopathological examination. Doppler's velocity waveforms of small endometrial blood vessels could be detected in 9% of the women with non-neoplastic endometrium and in 42% of the women with neoplastic endometrium (P<0.05). The mean+/-S.D. of the endometrial thickness was significantly higher in the women with neoplastic endometrium than that of the women with non-neoplastic endometrium (16.6+/-6.1 mm vs. 9.5+/-4.7 mm, P<0.05).
Conclusion: Doppler's velocity waveforms of uterine vessels coupled with transvaginal ultrasonography are not valuable enough to replace histopathological examination in the diagnosis of a neoplastic endometrial pathology. However, it may be helpful in cases in which invasive techniques are difficult to perform and in the differentiation of a certain group of patients at little risk of endometrial carcinoma.