Literature DB >> 26175312

Are radiologists superior to orthopaedic surgeons in diagnosing instability-related shoulder lesions on magnetic resonance arthrography? A multicenter reproducibility and accuracy study.

Susan van Grinsven1, Thijs A Nijenhuis2, Peer C Konings2, Albert van Kampen3, Corné J M van Loon2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: We compared the diagnostic reproducibility and accuracy of musculoskeletal radiologists with orthopaedic shoulder surgeons in 2 large medical centers in assessing magnetic resonance arthrograms (MRAs) of patients with traumatic anterior shoulder instability.
METHODS: Forty-five surgically confirmed MRAs were assessed by 4 radiologists, 4 orthopaedic surgeons, 2 radiologic teams, and 2 orthopaedic teams. During MRA assessment and surgery, the same 7-lesion scoring form was used. κ Coefficients, sensitivity, specificity, and differences in percentage of agreement or correct diagnosis (P < .05, McNemar test) were calculated per lesion and overall per the 7 lesion types.
RESULTS: The overall κ between the individual radiologists (κ = 0.51, κ = 0.46) and orthopaedic surgeons (κ = 0.46, κ = 0.41) was moderate. Although the overall percentage of agreement between the radiologists was slightly higher than that between the orthopaedic surgeons in both centers (80.0% vs 77.5% and 75.2% vs 73.7%), there was no significant difference. In each medical center, however, the most experienced orthopaedic surgeon was exceedingly more accurate than both radiologists per the 7 lesion types (81.9% vs 72.4%/74.6% and 76.5% vs 67.3%/73.7%). In 3 of 4 cases, this difference was significant. Overall accuracy improvement through consensus assessment was merely established for the weakest member of each team.
CONCLUSION: Experienced orthopaedic surgeons are more accurate than radiologists in assessing traumatic anterior shoulder instability-related lesions on MRA. In case of diagnosis disagreement, these orthopaedic surgeons should base their treatment decision on their own MRA interpretation.
Copyright © 2015 Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Board of Trustees. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Shoulder joint; accuracy; agreement; anterior traumatic shoulder dislocation; instability; magnetic resonance arthrography; reproducibility; sensitivity and specificity

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26175312     DOI: 10.1016/j.jse.2015.05.050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Shoulder Elbow Surg        ISSN: 1058-2746            Impact factor:   3.019


  4 in total

Review 1.  The Epidemiology and Natural History of Anterior Shoulder Instability.

Authors:  Joseph W Galvin; Justin J Ernat; Brian R Waterman; Monica J Stadecker; Stephen A Parada
Journal:  Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med       Date:  2017-12

2.  Shoulder Arthroscopy in Conjunction With an Open Latarjet Procedure Can Identify Pathology That May Not Be Accounted for With Magnetic Resonance Imaging.

Authors:  Justin J Ernat; Dylan R Rakowski; Aaron J Casp; Simon Lee; Annalise M Peebles; Jared A Hanson; Matthew T Provencher; Peter J Millett
Journal:  Arthrosc Sports Med Rehabil       Date:  2021-12-07

3.  The V-Sign: A Simple Radiographic Sign of Shoulder Subluxation.

Authors:  Bradley Schoch; Adam Smitherman; Mary Beth Horodyski; Aimee Struk; Joseph J King; Kevin W Farmer; Thomas Wright
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2019-12-29

4.  Assessment of acetabular chondral damage and labral pathologies via direct MR arthrography: specialization matters.

Authors:  A Zimmerer; M M Schneider; K Tramountanis; V Janz; W Miehlke; G I Wassilew; C Sobau
Journal:  Arch Orthop Trauma Surg       Date:  2021-07-19       Impact factor: 2.928

  4 in total

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