医学
放射科
剪辑
医学诊断
组内相关
核医学
外科
临床心理学
心理测量学
作者
Michel Kahaleh,Monica Gaidhane,Haroon Shahid,Amy Tyberg,Avik Sarkar,José Celso Ardengh,Prashant Kedia,Iman Andalib,Frank G. Gress,Amrita Sethi,S. Ian Gan,Supriya Suresh,Michael Makar,Romy Bareket,Adam Slivka,Jessica Widmer,Priya A. Jamidar,Resheed Alkhiari,Roberto Oleas,Dongchoon Kim,Carlos Robles‐Medranda,Isaac Raijman
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.gie.2021.08.015
摘要
Background and Aims
Digital single-operator cholangioscopy (DSOC) allows direct visualization of the biliary tree for evaluation of biliary strictures. Our objective was to assess the interobserver agreement (IOA) of DSOC interpretation for indeterminate biliary strictures using newly refined criteria. Methods
Fourteen endoscopists were asked to review an atlas of reference clips and images of 5 criteria derived from expert consensus. They then proceeded to score 50 deidentified DSOC video clips based on the visualization of tortuous and dilated vessels, irregular nodulations, raised intraductal lesions, irregular surface with or without ulcerations, and friability. The endoscopists then diagnosed the clips as neoplastic or non-neoplastic. Intraclass correlation (ICC) analysis was done to evaluate inter-rater agreement for both criteria sets and final diagnosis. Results
Clips of 41 malignant lesions and 9 benign lesions were scored. Three of 5 revised criteria had almost perfect agreement. ICC was almost perfect for presence of tortuous and dilated vessels (.86), raised intraductal lesions (.90), and presence of friability (.83); substantial agreement for presence of irregular nodulations (.71); and moderate agreement for presence of irregular surface with or without ulcerations (.44). The diagnostic ICC was almost perfect for neoplastic (.90) and non-neoplastic (.90) diagnoses. The overall diagnostic accuracy using the revised criteria was 77%, ranging from 64% to 88%. Conclusions
The IOA and accuracy rate of DSOC using the new Mendoza criteria shows a significant increase of 16% and 20% compared with previous criteria. The reference atlas helps with formal training and may improve diagnostic accuracy. (Clinical trial registration number: NCT02166099.)
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