Central versus Local Radiological Reading of Acute Computed Tomography Characteristics in Multi-Center Traumatic Brain Injury Research

Observer variability in local radiological reading is a major concern in large-scale multi-center traumatic brain injury (TBI) studies. A central review process has been advocated to minimize this variability. The aim of this study is to compare central with local reading of TBI imaging datasets and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neurotrauma 2019-04, Vol.36 (7), p.1080-1092
Hauptverfasser: Vande Vyvere, Thijs, Wilms, Guido, Claes, Lene, Martin Leon, Francisco, Nieboer, Daan, Verheyden, Jan, van den Hauwe, Luc, Pullens, Pim, Maas, Andrew I R, Parizel, Paul M
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container_end_page 1092
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1080
container_title Journal of neurotrauma
container_volume 36
creator Vande Vyvere, Thijs
Wilms, Guido
Claes, Lene
Martin Leon, Francisco
Nieboer, Daan
Verheyden, Jan
van den Hauwe, Luc
Pullens, Pim
Maas, Andrew I R
Parizel, Paul M
description Observer variability in local radiological reading is a major concern in large-scale multi-center traumatic brain injury (TBI) studies. A central review process has been advocated to minimize this variability. The aim of this study is to compare central with local reading of TBI imaging datasets and to investigate the added value of central review. A total of 2050 admission computed tomography (CT) scans from subjects enrolled in the Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) study were analyzed for seven main CT characteristics. Kappa statistics were used to calculate agreement between central and local evaluations and a center-specific analysis was performed. The McNemar test was used to detect whether discordances were significant. Central interobserver and intra-observer agreement was calculated in a subset of patients. Good agreement was found between central and local assessment for the presence or absence of structural pathology (CT+, CT-, κ = 0.73) and most CT characteristics (κ = 0.62 to 0.71), except for traumatic axonal injury lesions (κ = 0.37). Despite good kappa values, discordances were significant in four of seven CT characteristics (i.e., midline shift, contusion, traumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage, and cisternal compression; p = 0.0005). Central reviewers showed substantial to excellent interobserver and intra-observer agreement (κ = 0.73 to κ = 0.96), contrasted by considerable variability in local radiological reading. Compared with local evaluation, a central review process offers a more consistent radiological reading of acute CT characteristics in TBI. It generates reliable, reproducible data and should be recommended for use in multi-center TBI studies.
doi_str_mv 10.1089/neu.2018.6061
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A central review process has been advocated to minimize this variability. The aim of this study is to compare central with local reading of TBI imaging datasets and to investigate the added value of central review. A total of 2050 admission computed tomography (CT) scans from subjects enrolled in the Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) study were analyzed for seven main CT characteristics. Kappa statistics were used to calculate agreement between central and local evaluations and a center-specific analysis was performed. The McNemar test was used to detect whether discordances were significant. Central interobserver and intra-observer agreement was calculated in a subset of patients. Good agreement was found between central and local assessment for the presence or absence of structural pathology (CT+, CT-, κ = 0.73) and most CT characteristics (κ = 0.62 to 0.71), except for traumatic axonal injury lesions (κ = 0.37). 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subjects Agreement
Anesthesiology
Brain - diagnostic imaging
Brain Injuries, Traumatic - diagnostic imaging
Brain research
central radiology review
Collaboration
Compression
Computed tomography
Critical care
Datasets
Emergency medical care
Health care
Hospitals
Human health and pathology
Human health sciences
Humans
Intensive care
Language
Life Sciences
Medical imaging
Neuroimaging
neurokirurgi
Neurologie
Neurology
Neurosciences
Neurosurgery
Observer Variation
Preventive medicine
Reproducibility of Results
Scanners
Sciences de la santé humaine
Statistical analysis
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Traumatic brain injury
title Central versus Local Radiological Reading of Acute Computed Tomography Characteristics in Multi-Center Traumatic Brain Injury Research
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