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Interobserver Agreement in Clinical Grading of Vitreous Haze Using Alternative Grading Scales.

Authors :
Hornbeak, Dana M.
Payal, Abhishek
Pistilli, Maxwell
Biswas, Jyotirmay
Ganesh, Sudha K.
Gupta, Vishali
Rathinam, Sivakumar R.
Davis, Janet L.
Kempen, John H.
Source :
Ophthalmology. Aug2014, Vol. 121 Issue 8, p1643-1648. 6p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the reliability of clinical grading of vitreous haze using a new 9-step ordinal scale versus the existing 6-step ordinal scale. Design: Evaluation of diagnostic test (interobserver agreement study). Participants: A total of 119 consecutive patients (204 uveitic eyes) presenting for uveitis subspecialty care on the study day at 1 of 3 large uveitis centers. Methods: Five pairs of uveitis specialists clinically graded vitreous haze in the same eyes, one after the other using the same equipment, using the 6- and 9-step scales. Main Outcome Measures: Agreement in vitreous haze grade between each pair of specialists was evaluated by the κ statistic (exact agreement and agreement within 1 or 2 grades). Results: The scales correlated well (Spearman's ρ = 0.84). Exact agreement was modest using both the 6-step and 9-step scales: average κ = 0.46 (range, 0.28-0.81) and κ = 0.40 (range, 0.15-0.63), respectively. Within 1-grade agreement was slightly more favorable for the scale with fewer steps, but values were excellent for both scales: κ = 0.75 (range, 0.66-0.96) and κ = 0.62 (range, 0.38-0.87), respectively. Within 2-grade agreement for the 9-step scale also was excellent (κ = 0.85; range, 0.79-0.92). Two-fold more cases were potentially clinical trial eligible on the basis of the 9-step than the 6-step scale (P<0.001). Conclusions: Both scales are sufficiently reproducible using clinical grading for clinical and research use with the appropriate threshold (≥2- and ≥3-step differences for the 6- and 9-step scales, respectively). The results suggest that more eyes are likely to meet eligibility criteria for trials using the 9-step scale. The 9-step scale appears to have higher reproducibility with Reading Center grading than clinical grading, suggesting that Reading Center grading may be preferable for clinical trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01616420
Volume :
121
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ophthalmology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
97230426
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ophtha.2014.02.018