Literature DB >> 16880301

Reliability and agreement of urodynamics interpretations in a female pelvic medicine center.

James L Whiteside1, Adonis Hijaz, Peter B Imrey, Matthew D Barber, Marie F Paraiso, Raymond R Rackley, Sandip P Vasavada, Mark D Walters, Firouz Daneshgari.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the reliability and interobserver consistency of urodynamic interpretations of female bladder and urethral function.
METHODS: Three urogynecologists and three female urologists at a tertiary care medical center reviewed masked, abstracted clinical and urodynamic information from 100 charts, selected for adequate completeness from a consecutive series of 135 women referred for urodynamic testing. For each of the 100 cases, the reviewers assigned International Continence Society filling and voiding phase diagnoses, and overall clinical diagnoses. Raw agreement proportions and weighted kappa chance-corrected agreement statistics (kappa) were used jointly to describe both reliability and interobserver agreement. Reliability was estimated from duplicate reviews, masked and separated by at least 4 months, of each case by each physician. Interobserver agreement was estimated from comparisons of all pairs of responses from different physicians.
RESULTS: For clinical diagnosis of stress incontinence (present, absent, indeterminate), the within- and across-physician weighted kappa's were, respectively, 0.78 and 0.68. Corresponding results were 0.40 and 0.13 for detrusor overactivity without incontinence, 0.58 and 0.38 for detrusor overactivity with incontinence, and 0.51 and 0.26 for voiding dysfunction. Standard errors of each kappa were between 0.023 and 0.043.
CONCLUSION: In our group, lower urinary tract diagnoses of stress urinary incontinence from both clinical and urodynamic data demonstrated substantial reliability and interobserver agreement. However, by conventional interpretation of kappa-statistics, reliability of diagnoses of detrusor overactivity or voiding dysfunction was only moderate, and interobserver agreement on these diagnoses was no better than fair. Urodynamic interpretations may not be satisfactorily reproducible for these diagnoses.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16880301     DOI: 10.1097/01.AOG.0000227778.77189.2d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Obstet Gynecol        ISSN: 0029-7844            Impact factor:   7.661


  4 in total

1.  Evaluation and management of complete vaginal eversion after retropubic urethropexy.

Authors:  Mark Walters; Bobby Shull; Carlos J Sarsotti
Journal:  Int Urogynecol J Pelvic Floor Dysfunct       Date:  2007-10-13

2.  Children with tethered cord syndrome of different etiology benefit from microsurgery-a single institution experience.

Authors:  Pantelis Stavrinou; Mathias Kunz; Markus Lehner; Alfred Heger; Wolfgang Müller-Felber; Joerg-Christian Tonn; Aurelia Peraud
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2011-01-06       Impact factor: 1.475

3.  Diagnostic agreement of the 3 Incontinence Questionnaire to video-urodynamics findings in women with urinary incontinence: Department of Urology, Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust Wexham Park Hospital Slough, Berkshire, United Kingdom.

Authors:  Muhammad Jamal Khan; Mohammad Ali Omar; Marc Laniado
Journal:  Cent European J Urol       Date:  2017-02-21

4.  Can multicentre urodynamic studies provide high quality evidence for the clinical effectiveness of urodynamics? ICI-RS 2019.

Authors:  Kevin Rademakers; Andrew Gammie; Habiba Yasmin; Linda Cardozo; Tamsin Greenwell; Christopher Harding; Ruth Kirschner-Hermanns; Tom Marcelissen; Enrico Finazzi-Agro
Journal:  Neurourol Urodyn       Date:  2020-01-21       Impact factor: 2.696

  4 in total

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