| Literature DB >> 30249541 |
Susan C Shelmerdine1, Dean Langan2, John C Hutchinson3, Melissa Hickson4, Kerry Pawley4, Joseph Suich5, Liina Palm3, Neil J Sebire3, Angela Wade2, Owen J Arthurs6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Internationally, chest radiography is the standard investigation for identifying rib fractures in suspected physical abuse in infants. Several small observation studies in children have found that chest CT can provide greater accuracy than radiography for fracture detection, potentially aiding medicolegal proceedings in abuse cases; however, to our knowledge, this greater accuracy has not been comprehensively evaluated. We aimed to determine differences in rib fracture detection rates between post-mortem chest radiographs and chest CT images, using forensic autopsy as the reference standard.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30249541 PMCID: PMC6350458 DOI: 10.1016/S2352-4642(18)30274-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Child Adolesc Health ISSN: 2352-4642
Figure 1Case availability and selection
*No whole-body images were available, and hence no ribs could be analysed.
Key demographic information for cases, rib fractures, and autopsy findings
| 1 | 7 years | Female | 4 | Unlikely | Sepsis |
| 2 | 3 years | Male | 20 | High | Trauma, probably non-accidental injury |
| 3 | 6 months | Male | 6 | Unlikely | Congenital vitamin D deficiency |
| 4 | 13 months | Female | 19 | High | Trauma, probably non-accidental injury |
| 5 | 1 month | Male | 7 | Unlikely | Small bowel mesenteric volvulus |
| 6 | 1 month | Female | 2 | Unlikely | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 7 | 2 months | Male | 3 | High | Trauma, probably non-accidental injury |
| 8 | 4 months | Male | 0 | NA | Complex congenital heart disease |
| 9 | 3 months | Female | 8 | Unlikely | Unascertained |
| 10 | 11 months | Male | 7 | High | Asphyxia, probably non-accidental injury |
| 11 | 1 month | Female | 0 | NA | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 12 | 4 months | Female | 9 | Unlikely | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 13 | 1 month | Male | 8 | Unlikely | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 14 | 8 months | Female | 0 | NA | Acute respiratory failure, underlying syndrome |
| 15 | 1 month | Male | 9 | Unlikely | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 16 | 2 months | Female | 2 | Unlikely | Intracranial haemorrhage |
| 17 | 1 month | Male | 6 | Unlikely | Sudden unexplained death in infancy, no suspicious injuries |
| 18 | 1 month | Male | 0 | NA | Pulmonary haemorrhage |
| 19 | 19 months | Female | 0 | NA | Unascertained |
| 20 | 1 month | Male | 15 | High | Severe head trauma |
| 21 | 8 months | Female | 0 | NA | Post-cardiac arrest hypoxic brain injury |
| 22 | 2 months | Female | 0 | NA | Unascertained |
| 23 | 9 months | Female | 0 | NA | Acquired heart disease |
| 24 | 4 months | Female | 4 | Uncertain | Sepsis, head injury |
| 25 | 4 years | Male | 7 | High | Trauma, probably non-accidental injury |
Each of the 25 cases are summarised with autopsy findings. The likelihood of rib fracture from inflicted abuse was estimated retrospectively from the complete autopsy results. Rib fractures in children who died in non-suspicious circumstances were mainly attributed to resuscitation. NA=not applicable (for cases without rib fractures).
Overall diagnostic performance of chest radiography and CT for rib fracture detection
| Chest radiography (n=68 400) | 912/2391 | 4256/60 841 | 13·5% (8·1 to 21·5) | 97·9% (96·8 to 98·7) | 7·2% (1·9 to 23·6) | 99·4% (97·0 to 99·9) |
| CT (n=63 000) | 2089/3129 | 2671/55 111 | 44·9% (31·7 to 58·9) | 97·0% (95·3 to 98·0) | 12·0% (3·3 to 35·1) | 99·6% (98·8 to 99·9) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 31·4% (23·3 to 37·8; p<0·001) | −0·9% (−1·4 to −0·6; p<0·001) | 4·8% (1·2 to 11·9 p<0·05) | 0·2% (0·0 to 1·0; p≥0·05) |
| Chest radiography (n=22 800) | 1579/1410 | 3323/16 488 | 23·1% (12·9 to 37·8) | 96·4% (94·1 to 97·8) | 15·9% (3·2 to 52·1) | 98·1% (91·3 to 99·6) |
| CT (n=21 000) | 2713/1886 | 1801/14 599 | 62·4% (44·9 to 77·1) | 94·1% (90·5 to 96·3) | 18·8% (3·9 to 56·9) | 98·9% (94·8 to 99·8) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 39·3% (31·9 to 42·2; p<0·001) | −2·3% (−3·7 to −1·4; p<0·001) | 2·9% (0·1 to 7·4 p<0·05) | 1·5% (0·1 to 3·3p<0·05) |
| Chest radiography (n=950) | 405/155 | 241/149 | 64·7% (57·3 to 71·4) | 48·9% (41·6 to 56·2) | 72·3% (68·5 to 75·9) | 38·2% (33·5 to 43·1) |
| CT (n=875) | 465/141 | 130/139 | 81·5% (75·8 to 86·0) | 49·3% (41·8 to 56·9) | 76·7% (76·7 to 73·2) | 51·7% (45·7 to 57·6) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 16·7% (11·5 to 22·2; p<0·001) | 0·4% (−7·0 to 9·0; p≥0·05) | 4·4% (−0·4 to 9·3; p≥0·05) | 13·5% (6·0 to 21·4; p<0·001) |
Data are shown with 95% CI and p values when available. Difference in diagnostic statistics calculated as CT minus chest radiography. The positive and negative results are the total frequencies across all reporters, cases, and locations—eg, 68 400 rib locations (anterior, lateral, and posterior) were included across all reporters on chest radiographs (three locations per rib × 24 ribs × 25 cases × 38 reporters) and 63 000 rib locations across 35 reporters on CT. 136 locations had fractures on autopsy and so a total of 136 × 38 reporters=5168 fractures could be detected on the radiographs; and 136 locations × 35 reporters=4760 fractures on CT images. Estimates are derived from multilevel models and therefore differ from the raw estimates that could be calculated from number of true positive, false positive, false negative, and true negative events.
Figure 2Scatter plots of sensitivity (A) and specificity (B) of CT versus chest radiography, by reporter job title
Datapoints show the sensitivity and specificity of each reporter that completed both phases of the study (n=35), and those that only completed the chest radiography analysis (n=38). Estimates were derived from the random-effects of multilevel models. Graph B is on a reduced scale of 85–100%.
Figure 3Scatter plots of sensitivity versus specificity for chest radiography (A) and CT (B) by reporter job title
Datapoints show the sensitivity and specificity of each reporter that completed both phases of the study (n=35), and those that only completed the chest radiography analysis (n=38). Estimates were derived from the random-effects of multilevel models.
Overall diagnostic performance of chest radiography and CT by rib fracture position: anterior, posterior, and lateral
| Chest radiography (n=22 800) | 733/871 | 3485/17 711 | 15·8% (8·0 to 29·9) | 97·2% (95·9 to 98·3) | 14·7% (3·6 to 41·6) | 98·2% (91·7 to 99·7) |
| CT (n=21 000) | 1769/1332 | 2116/15 783 | 51·4% (32·8 to 70·0) | 95·2% (92·7 to 97·0) | 24·2% (6·2 to 56·6) | 98·9% (94·7 to 99·8) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 35·5% (24·5 to 41·7; p<0·001) | −2·0% (−3·2 to −1·3; p<0·001) | 9·5% (2·5 to 16·7; p<0·01) | 0·7% (0·1 to 3·0; p<0·05) |
| Chest radiography (n=22 800) | 88/683 | 482/21 547 | 27·3% (14·5 to 47·0) | 98·4% (97·6 to 99·0) | 1·6% (0·3 to 6·2) | 99·9% (99·3 to 100) |
| CT (n=21 000) | 164/1081 | 1011/6479 | 60·2% (40·3 to 78·0) | 97·7% (96·5 to 98·5) | 2·8% (0·6 to 10·7) | 99·9% (99·4 to 100) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 33·0% (23·5 to 39·4; p<0·001) | −0·7% (−1·2 to −0·4; p<0·001) | 1·2% (0·1 to 4·7; p<0·05) | 0 (0·0 to 0·1; p≥0·05) |
| Chest radiography (n=22 800) | 91/837 | 289/21 583 | 0·8% (0·0 to 2·5) | 98·0% (97·0 to 98·8) | 1·0% (0·2 to 4·3) | 99·9% (99·6 to 100·0) |
| CT (n=21 000) | 164/901 | 361/19 574 | 4·0% (1·1 to 10·4) | 97·7% (96·5 to 98·6) | 1·4% (0·3 to 5·4) | 99·9% (99·7 to 100·0) |
| Difference | .. | .. | 3·2% (0·6 to 8·5; p<0·05) | −0·3% (−0·6 to −0·1; p<0·01) | 0·4% (−0·2 to 1·6; p≥0·05) | 0 (0·0 to 0·1; p≥0·05) |
Data are shown with 95% CI and p values when available. Difference in diagnostic statistics calculated as CT minus chest radiography. Diagnostic data derived according to the definition that an observation is successful if the fracture is detected on the correct rib in the correct location. The positive and negative results are the total frequencies across all reporters, cases, and locations. Estimates are derived from multilevel models and therefore differ from the raw estimates that could be calculated from number of true positive, false positive, false negative, and true negative events.