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Observer reliability of CT angiography in the assessment of acute ischaemic stroke: data from the Third International Stroke Trial.

Authors :
Mair G
von Kummer R
Adami A
White PM
Adams ME
Yan B
Demchuk AM
Farrall AJ
Sellar RJ
Ramaswamy R
Mollison D
Boyd EV
Rodrigues MA
Samji K
Baird AJ
Cohen G
Sakka E
Palmer J
Perry D
Lindley R
Sandercock PA
Wardlaw JM
Source :
Neuroradiology [Neuroradiology] 2015 Jan; Vol. 57 (1), pp. 1-9. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Oct 07.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Introduction: CT angiography (CTA) is often used for assessing patients with acute ischaemic stroke. Only limited observer reliability data exist. We tested inter- and intra-observer reliability for the assessment of CTA in acute ischaemic stroke.<br />Methods: We selected 15 cases from the Third International Stroke Trial (IST-3, ISRCTN25765518) with various degrees of arterial obstruction in different intracranial locations on CTA. To assess inter-observer reliability, seven members of the IST-3 expert image reading panel (>5 years experience reading CTA) and seven radiology trainees (<2 years experience) rated all 15 scans independently and blind to clinical data for: presence (versus absence) of any intracranial arterial abnormality (stenosis or occlusion), severity of arterial abnormality using relevant scales (IST-3 angiography score, Thrombolysis in Cerebral Infarction (TICI) score, Clot Burden Score), collateral supply and visibility of a perfusion defect on CTA source images (CTA-SI). Intra-observer reliability was assessed using independently repeated expert panel scan ratings. We assessed observer agreement with Krippendorff's-alpha (K-alpha).<br />Results: Among experienced observers, inter-observer agreement was substantial for the identification of any angiographic abnormality (K-alpha = 0.70) and with an angiography assessment scale (K-alpha = 0.60-0.66). There was less agreement for grades of collateral supply (K-alpha = 0.56) or for identification of a perfusion defect on CTA-SI (K-alpha = 0.32). Radiology trainees performed as well as expert readers when additional training was undertaken (neuroradiology specialist trainees). Intra-observer agreement among experts provided similar results (K-alpha = 0.33-0.72).<br />Conclusion: For most imaging characteristics assessed, CTA has moderate to substantial observer agreement in acute ischaemic stroke. Experienced readers and those with specialist training perform best.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-1920
Volume :
57
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neuroradiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25287075
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00234-014-1441-0