Jennifer M Siu, Shaunak Amin, Evan J Propst, Nikolaus E Wolter, Jeremy Prager, Michelle Wyatt, Claire Lawlor, Douglas Sidell, Deepak Mehta, Reema Padia, Nicholas Smith, Christopher Hartnick, Catherine K Hart, Xing Wang, Kaalan Johnson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Current assessment techniques for determining whether a patient has normal interarytenoid anatomy, a deep interarytenoid notch, or a minor laryngeal cleft are highly variable. However, differentiating between these three entities is important, given it may distinguish whether a patient should be considered for surgical intervention. The Interarytenoid Assessment Protocol (IAAP) was developed to provide standardization of interarytenoid anatomy evaluations. We aimed to assess the reliability of the IAAP for assessment of interaytenoid mucosal height (IAMH) through a multi-institutional validation study.
Methods: Reliability of the IAAP was assessed by 10 pediatric otolaryngologists all from different academic centers. 30 de-identified endoscopic videos of interarytenoid assessments were rated at two separate time points, 2 months apart. Intra-class correlation (ICC) coefficients with two-way models were used to evaluate inter- and intra-rater reliability.
Results: Thirty endoscopic videos were collected for patients with a median (IQR) age of 4.9 years (59 months; range: 1 month to 20 years). On the first video assessment, inter-rater reliability was 0.74 (95% CI 0.63-0.84), and on the second video assessment, inter-rater reliability was 0.75 (95% CI 0.63-0.85) indicating strong inter-rater reliability. Overall intra-rater test-retest reliability was 0.75 (95% CI 0.69-0.79) indicating strong agreement. In almost half, 14 (46.6%) raters chose IAAP classification levels within 1 level of each other.
Conclusions: Multi-institutional validation of the IAAP demonstrates strong inter- and intra-rater reliability for assessment of IAMH when evaluated through pictorial analysis. Standardization of anatomical evaluations may improve our ability to perform more reliable outcomes studies of pediatric pharyngeal dysphagia in the future.
期刊介绍:
The Laryngoscope has been the leading source of information on advances in the diagnosis and treatment of head and neck disorders since 1890. The Laryngoscope is the first choice among otolaryngologists for publication of their important findings and techniques. Each monthly issue of The Laryngoscope features peer-reviewed medical, clinical, and research contributions in general otolaryngology, allergy/rhinology, otology/neurotology, laryngology/bronchoesophagology, head and neck surgery, sleep medicine, pediatric otolaryngology, facial plastics and reconstructive surgery, oncology, and communicative disorders. Contributions include papers and posters presented at the Annual and Section Meetings of the Triological Society, as well as independent papers, "How I Do It", "Triological Best Practice" articles, and contemporary reviews. Theses authored by the Triological Society’s new Fellows as well as papers presented at meetings of the American Laryngological Association are published in The Laryngoscope.
• Broncho-esophagology
• Communicative disorders
• Head and neck surgery
• Plastic and reconstructive facial surgery
• Oncology
• Speech and hearing defects