A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss

Abstract Background Since the publication over 50 years ago of the alkaline hematin method for quantifying menstrual blood loss (MBL) many new approaches have been developed to assess MBL. The aim of this systematic review is to determine for methods of measuring MBL: ability to distinguish between...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julia L. Magnay, Shaughn O’Brien, Christoph Gerlinger, Christian Seitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-08-01
Series:BMC Women's Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12905-018-0627-8
_version_ 1818694029568638976
author Julia L. Magnay
Shaughn O’Brien
Christoph Gerlinger
Christian Seitz
author_facet Julia L. Magnay
Shaughn O’Brien
Christoph Gerlinger
Christian Seitz
author_sort Julia L. Magnay
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Since the publication over 50 years ago of the alkaline hematin method for quantifying menstrual blood loss (MBL) many new approaches have been developed to assess MBL. The aim of this systematic review is to determine for methods of measuring MBL: ability to distinguish between normal and heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB); practicalities and limitations in the research setting; and suitability for diagnosing HMB in routine clinical practice. Methods Embase®™, MEDLINE®, and ClinicalTrials.gov were screened for studies on the development/validation of MBL assessment methods in women with self-perceived HMB, actual HMB or uterine fibroids, or patients undergoing treatment for HMB. Studies using simulated menstrual fluid and those that included women with normal MBL as controls were also eligible for inclusion. Extracted data included study population, results of validation, and advantages/disadvantages of the technique. Results Seventy-one studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The sensitivity and/or specificity of diagnosing HMB were calculated in 16 studies of methods involving self-perception of MBL (11 pictorial), and in one analysis of the menstrual-fluid-loss (MFL) method; in 13 of these studies the comparator was the gold standard alkaline hematin technique. Sensitivity and specificity values by method were, respectively: MFL model, 89, 98%; pictorial blood loss assessment chart (PBAC), 58–99%, 7.5–89%; menstrual pictogram, 82–96%, 88–94%; models/questionnaires, 59–87%, 62–86%, and complaint of HMB, 74, 74%. The power of methods to identify HMB was also assessed using other analyses such as comparison of average measurements: statistical significance was reported for the PBAC, MFL, subjective complaint, and six questionnaires. In addition, PBAC scores, menstrual pictogram volumes, MFL, pad/tampon count, iron loss, and output from three questionnaires correlated significantly with values from a reference method in at least one study. In general, pictorial methods have been more comprehensively validated than questionnaires and models. Conclusions Every method to assess MBL has limitations. Pictorial methods strike a good balance between ease of use and validated accuracy of MBL determination, and could complement assessment of HMB using quality of life (QoL) in the clinical and research setting. Trial registration PRISMA registration number: CRD42016032956.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T13:23:05Z
format Article
id doaj.art-13c8ff01bb404b1baeea61c2d6f84055
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1472-6874
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T13:23:05Z
publishDate 2018-08-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Women's Health
spelling doaj.art-13c8ff01bb404b1baeea61c2d6f840552022-12-21T21:46:48ZengBMCBMC Women's Health1472-68742018-08-0118111310.1186/s12905-018-0627-8A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood lossJulia L. Magnay0Shaughn O’Brien1Christoph Gerlinger2Christian Seitz3Institute for Science and Technology in Medicine, Guy Hilton Research CentreInstitute for Science and Technology in Medicine, Guy Hilton Research CentreBayer AGBayer AGAbstract Background Since the publication over 50 years ago of the alkaline hematin method for quantifying menstrual blood loss (MBL) many new approaches have been developed to assess MBL. The aim of this systematic review is to determine for methods of measuring MBL: ability to distinguish between normal and heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB); practicalities and limitations in the research setting; and suitability for diagnosing HMB in routine clinical practice. Methods Embase®™, MEDLINE®, and ClinicalTrials.gov were screened for studies on the development/validation of MBL assessment methods in women with self-perceived HMB, actual HMB or uterine fibroids, or patients undergoing treatment for HMB. Studies using simulated menstrual fluid and those that included women with normal MBL as controls were also eligible for inclusion. Extracted data included study population, results of validation, and advantages/disadvantages of the technique. Results Seventy-one studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. The sensitivity and/or specificity of diagnosing HMB were calculated in 16 studies of methods involving self-perception of MBL (11 pictorial), and in one analysis of the menstrual-fluid-loss (MFL) method; in 13 of these studies the comparator was the gold standard alkaline hematin technique. Sensitivity and specificity values by method were, respectively: MFL model, 89, 98%; pictorial blood loss assessment chart (PBAC), 58–99%, 7.5–89%; menstrual pictogram, 82–96%, 88–94%; models/questionnaires, 59–87%, 62–86%, and complaint of HMB, 74, 74%. The power of methods to identify HMB was also assessed using other analyses such as comparison of average measurements: statistical significance was reported for the PBAC, MFL, subjective complaint, and six questionnaires. In addition, PBAC scores, menstrual pictogram volumes, MFL, pad/tampon count, iron loss, and output from three questionnaires correlated significantly with values from a reference method in at least one study. In general, pictorial methods have been more comprehensively validated than questionnaires and models. Conclusions Every method to assess MBL has limitations. Pictorial methods strike a good balance between ease of use and validated accuracy of MBL determination, and could complement assessment of HMB using quality of life (QoL) in the clinical and research setting. Trial registration PRISMA registration number: CRD42016032956.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12905-018-0627-8Alkaline hematinAlkaline haematinHeavy menstrual bleedingHMBMenorrhagiaMenstrual blood loss
spellingShingle Julia L. Magnay
Shaughn O’Brien
Christoph Gerlinger
Christian Seitz
A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
BMC Women's Health
Alkaline hematin
Alkaline haematin
Heavy menstrual bleeding
HMB
Menorrhagia
Menstrual blood loss
title A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
title_full A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
title_fullStr A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
title_full_unstemmed A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
title_short A systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
title_sort systematic review of methods to measure menstrual blood loss
topic Alkaline hematin
Alkaline haematin
Heavy menstrual bleeding
HMB
Menorrhagia
Menstrual blood loss
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12905-018-0627-8
work_keys_str_mv AT julialmagnay asystematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT shaughnobrien asystematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT christophgerlinger asystematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT christianseitz asystematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT julialmagnay systematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT shaughnobrien systematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT christophgerlinger systematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss
AT christianseitz systematicreviewofmethodstomeasuremenstrualbloodloss