Purpose: To determine if a negative renal sonogram is reliably predictive of the absence of vesicoureteral reflux at voiding cystourethrography (VCUG) in children aged 5 years or older.
Materials and methods: Imaging studies in 70 children aged 5 years or older who underwent renal ultrasound (US) and VCUG on the same day were reviewed. These children had initially undergone evaluation because of a urinary tract infection.
Results: Five of 70 children had abnormal sonograms; two (40%) of the five had reflux at VCUG. One had mild pelvicalyceal dilatation, and one had a small kidney. The other three (without reflux) had a pelvic kidney, a calyceal diverticulum, or a renal stone. Of 65 children with a negative sonogram, 19 (29%) had reflux at VCUG; 46 (71%) did not. Altogether, of the 70 children, 21 had reflux, 19 (90%) of whom had no sonographic abnormality.
Conclusion: Children with abnormal screening renal sonograms often have vesicoureteral reflux, but a normal sonogram does not reliably exclude the condition even in children aged 5 years or older. Therefore, VCUG must be performed even in older children, regardless of US findings, if clinical decisions are influenced by documentation of the presence of VUR.