Validation of the AOSpine-DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification - Effect of Surgical Experience, Surgical Specialty, Work-Setting and Trauma Center Level on Reliability and Reproducibility.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Julian Scherer, Sebastian Frederick Bigdon, Gaston Camino-Willhuber, Ulrich Spiegl, Andrei Fernandes Joaquim, Harvinder Singh Chhabra, Marcel Dvorak, Gregory Schroeder, Mohammad El-Sharkawi, Richard Bransford, Lorin Michael Benneker, Klaus John Schnake
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Abstract

Study DesignCross-sectional survey.ObjectivesA cornerstone of classification systems is good reliability amongst different groups of classification users. Thus, the aim of this international validation study was to assess the reliability of the new AO Spine DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification (OF classification) stratified by surgical specialty, work-setting, work-experience, and trauma center level.Methods320 spine surgeons were asked to rate 27 cases according to the OF classification at 2 time points, 4 weeks apart (assessment 1 and 2) in this online-webinar based validation process. The kappa statistic (κ) was calculated to assess the inter-observer reliability and the intra-rater reproducibility.ResultsA total of 7798 (90.3%) ratings were recorded in assessment 1 and 6621 (76.6%) ratings in assessment 2. Global inter-rater reliability was moderate in both assessments (κ = 0.57; κ = 0.58). Participants with a work-experience of >20 years showed the highest inter-rater agreement in both assessments globally (κ = 0.65; κ = 0.67). Participants from a level-1 trauma center showed the highest agreement (κ = 0.58), whereas participants working at a tertiary trauma center showed higher grade of agreement in the second assessment (κ = 0.66). Participants working in academia showed the highest agreement in assessment 2 (κ = 0.6). Surgeons with academic background and surgeons employed by a hospital showed substantial intra-rater agreement in the second assessment.ConclusionsThe AO Spine-DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification showed moderate to substantial inter-rater agreement as well as intra-rater reproducibility regardless of work-setting, surgical experience, level of trauma center and surgical specialty.

AOSpine-DGOU骨质疏松性骨折分类的验证——手术经验、手术专业、工作环境和创伤中心水平对可靠性和可重复性的影响
研究设计横断面调查。目的分类系统的基础是在不同的分类用户群体之间保持良好的可靠性。因此,这项国际验证研究的目的是评估新的AO脊柱DGOU骨质疏松性骨折分类(of分类)的可靠性,该分类按外科专业、工作环境、工作经验和创伤中心水平分层。方法在基于网络研讨会的验证过程中,320名脊柱外科医生被要求在间隔4周的2个时间点(评估1和2)根据OF分类对27例患者进行评分。计算kappa统计量(κ)来评估观察者间的信度和评分内的再现性。结果评估1共记录评分7798次(90.3%),评估2共记录评分6621次(76.6%)。两项评估的整体评分者间信度均为中等(κ = 0.57;κ = 0.58)。在全球范围内,工作经验为20年的参与者在两项评估中表现出最高的评分一致性(κ = 0.65;κ = 0.67)。来自一级创伤中心的参与者表现出最高的一致性(κ = 0.58),而在三级创伤中心工作的参与者在第二次评估中表现出更高的一致性(κ = 0.66)。在学术界工作的参与者在评估2中表现出最高的一致性(κ = 0.6)。具有学术背景的外科医生和医院雇用的外科医生在第二次评估中表现出相当大的内部一致性。结论AO脊柱- dgou骨质疏松性骨折分类与工作环境、手术经验、创伤中心水平和外科专业无关,具有中度至高度的一致性和重复性。
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来源期刊
Global Spine Journal
Global Spine Journal Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
278
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Spine Journal (GSJ) is the official scientific publication of AOSpine. A peer-reviewed, open access journal, devoted to the study and treatment of spinal disorders, including diagnosis, operative and non-operative treatment options, surgical techniques, and emerging research and clinical developments.GSJ is indexed in PubMedCentral, SCOPUS, and Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI).
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