Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters

Abstract Background For diagnostic procedures to be clinically useful, they must be reliable. The interpretation of lumbar spine MRI scans is subject to variability and there is a lack of studies where reliability of multiple degenerative pathologies are rated simultaneously. The objective of our st...

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Main Authors: Klaus Doktor, Tue Secher Jensen, Henrik Wulff Christensen, Ulrich Fredberg, Morten Kindt, Eleanor Boyle, Jan Hartvigsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-02-01
Series:Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-020-0297-0
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spelling doaj-9ea4af30bcdb45949ec8438699295d902021-02-14T12:50:47ZengBMCChiropractic & Manual Therapies2045-709X2020-02-0128111010.1186/s12998-020-0297-0Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three ratersKlaus Doktor0Tue Secher Jensen1Henrik Wulff Christensen2Ulrich Fredberg3Morten Kindt4Eleanor Boyle5Jan Hartvigsen6Department of Sport Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical BiomechanicsNordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical BiomechanicsDiagnostic Centre, University Research Clinic for Innovative Patient Pathways, Silkeborg Regional Hospital, Aarhus UniversityDiagnostic Centre, University Research Clinic for Innovative Patient Pathways, Silkeborg Regional Hospital, Aarhus UniversityDepartment of Sport Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkDepartment of Sport Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern DenmarkAbstract Background For diagnostic procedures to be clinically useful, they must be reliable. The interpretation of lumbar spine MRI scans is subject to variability and there is a lack of studies where reliability of multiple degenerative pathologies are rated simultaneously. The objective of our study was to determine the inter-rater reliability of three independent raters evaluating degenerative pathologies seen with lumbar spine MRI. Methods Fifty-nine people, 35 patients with low back pain (LBP) or LBP and leg pain and 24 people without LBP or leg pain, received an MRI of the lumbar spine. Three raters (one radiologist and two chiropractors) evaluated the MRIs for the presence and severity of eight degenerative spinal pathologies using a standardized format: Spondylolisthesis, scoliosis, annular fissure, disc degeneration, disc contour, nerve root compromise, spinal stenosis and facet joint degeneration. Findings were identified and classified at disc level according to type and severity. Raters were instructed to evaluate all study sample persons once to assess inter-rater reliability (fully crossed design). Reliability was calculated using Gwet’s Agreement Coefficients (AC1 and AC2) and Cohen’s Kappa (κ) and Conger’s extension of Cohen’s. Gwet’s probabilistic benchmarking method to the Landis and Koch scale was used. MRI-findings achieving substantial reliability was considered acceptable. Results Inter-rater reliability for all raters combined, ranged from (Gwet’s AC1 or AC2): 0.64–0.99 and according to probabilistic benchmarking to the Landis and Koch scale equivalent to moderate to almost perfect reliability. Overall reliability level for individual pathologies was almost perfect reliability for spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, scoliosis and annular fissure, substantial for nerve root compromise and disc degeneration, and moderate for facet joint degeneration and disc contour. Conclusion Inter-rater reliability for 3 raters, evaluating 177 disc levels, was found to be overall acceptable for 6 out of 8 degenerative MRI-findings in the lumbar spine. Ratings of facet joint degeneration and disc contour achieved moderate reliability and was considered unacceptable.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-020-0297-0AgreementReliabilityReproducibilityLumbar spineLow Back painLeg pain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Klaus Doktor
Tue Secher Jensen
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Ulrich Fredberg
Morten Kindt
Eleanor Boyle
Jan Hartvigsen
spellingShingle Klaus Doktor
Tue Secher Jensen
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Ulrich Fredberg
Morten Kindt
Eleanor Boyle
Jan Hartvigsen
Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
Agreement
Reliability
Reproducibility
Lumbar spine
Low Back pain
Leg pain
author_facet Klaus Doktor
Tue Secher Jensen
Henrik Wulff Christensen
Ulrich Fredberg
Morten Kindt
Eleanor Boyle
Jan Hartvigsen
author_sort Klaus Doktor
title Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
title_short Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
title_full Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
title_fullStr Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
title_full_unstemmed Degenerative findings in lumbar spine MRI: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
title_sort degenerative findings in lumbar spine mri: an inter-rater reliability study involving three raters
publisher BMC
series Chiropractic & Manual Therapies
issn 2045-709X
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background For diagnostic procedures to be clinically useful, they must be reliable. The interpretation of lumbar spine MRI scans is subject to variability and there is a lack of studies where reliability of multiple degenerative pathologies are rated simultaneously. The objective of our study was to determine the inter-rater reliability of three independent raters evaluating degenerative pathologies seen with lumbar spine MRI. Methods Fifty-nine people, 35 patients with low back pain (LBP) or LBP and leg pain and 24 people without LBP or leg pain, received an MRI of the lumbar spine. Three raters (one radiologist and two chiropractors) evaluated the MRIs for the presence and severity of eight degenerative spinal pathologies using a standardized format: Spondylolisthesis, scoliosis, annular fissure, disc degeneration, disc contour, nerve root compromise, spinal stenosis and facet joint degeneration. Findings were identified and classified at disc level according to type and severity. Raters were instructed to evaluate all study sample persons once to assess inter-rater reliability (fully crossed design). Reliability was calculated using Gwet’s Agreement Coefficients (AC1 and AC2) and Cohen’s Kappa (κ) and Conger’s extension of Cohen’s. Gwet’s probabilistic benchmarking method to the Landis and Koch scale was used. MRI-findings achieving substantial reliability was considered acceptable. Results Inter-rater reliability for all raters combined, ranged from (Gwet’s AC1 or AC2): 0.64–0.99 and according to probabilistic benchmarking to the Landis and Koch scale equivalent to moderate to almost perfect reliability. Overall reliability level for individual pathologies was almost perfect reliability for spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, scoliosis and annular fissure, substantial for nerve root compromise and disc degeneration, and moderate for facet joint degeneration and disc contour. Conclusion Inter-rater reliability for 3 raters, evaluating 177 disc levels, was found to be overall acceptable for 6 out of 8 degenerative MRI-findings in the lumbar spine. Ratings of facet joint degeneration and disc contour achieved moderate reliability and was considered unacceptable.
topic Agreement
Reliability
Reproducibility
Lumbar spine
Low Back pain
Leg pain
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12998-020-0297-0
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