| Literature DB >> 35454020 |
Chih-Hao Chen1, Chii-Yuan Huang1,2, Hsiu-Lien Cheng1,3, Heng-Yu Haley Lin1, Yuan-Chia Chu4,5,6, Chun-Yu Chang7, Ying-Hui Lai3,8, Mao-Che Wang1,2,9, Yen-Fu Cheng1,2,10,11.
Abstract
Traditional otoscopy has some limitations, including poor visualization and inadequate time for evaluation in suboptimal environments. Smartphone-enabled otoscopy may improve examination quality and serve as a potential diagnostic tool for middle ear diseases using a telemedicine approach. The main objectives are to compare the correctness of smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy and to evaluate the diagnostic confidence of the examiner via meta-analysis. From inception through 20 January 2022, the Cochrane Library, PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, and Scopus databases were searched. Studies comparing smartphone-enabled otoscopy with traditional otoscopy regarding the outcome of interest were eligible. The relative risk (RR) for the rate of correctness in diagnosing ear conditions and the standardized mean difference (SMD) in diagnostic confidence were extracted. Sensitivity analysis and trial sequential analyses (TSAs) were conducted to further examine the pooled results. Study quality was evaluated by using the revised Cochrane risk of bias tool 2. Consequently, a total of 1840 examinees were divided into the smartphone-enabled otoscopy group and the traditional otoscopy group. Overall, the pooled result showed that smartphone-enabled otoscopy was associated with higher correctness than traditional otoscopy (RR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.06 to 1.51; p = 0.01; I2 = 70.0%). Consistently significant associations were also observed in the analysis after excluding the simulation study (RR, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.00 to 1.21; p = 0.04; I2 = 0%) and normal ear conditions (RR, 1.18; 95% CI, 1.01 to 1.40; p = 0.04; I2 = 65.0%). For the confidence of examiners using both otoscopy methods, the pooled result was nonsignificant between the smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy groups (SMD, 0.08; 95% CI, -0.24 to 0.40; p = 0.61; I2 = 16.3%). In conclusion, smartphone-enabled otoscopy was associated with a higher rate of correctness in the detection of middle ear diseases, and in patients with otologic complaints, the use of smartphone-enabled otoscopy may be considered. More large-scale studies should be performed to consolidate the results.Entities:
Keywords: conventional otoscopy; middle ear disease; smartphone-enabled otoscopy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454020 PMCID: PMC9029949 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12040972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Illustration of Trial Sequential Analysis (TSA). Area 1 between sequential monitoring boundary and inner wedge indicated the inconclusive result which may suffer from false positive (Area 1a) or false negative (Area 1b), more sample size is required for further consolidate conclusion. Area 2 demonstrate conclusive result of significant effect of experimental group or control group, while Area 3 indicate the conclusive result of non-significance between experimental group and control group.
Figure 2The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram.
Study characteristics.
| Study | Study Type | Country | Setting | Ear Condition | Sample (Smartphone/Traditional) | Event Rate (Event/Total) | Mean Age of Examinee (SD) | Level of Examiner | Smartphone-Enabled Otoscopy | Operating System of Smartphone |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kleinman et al. [ | RCT | USA | ED | AOM | 188 (92/96) | Smartphone group: 69/92 | 6.25 year (3.84) | Resident: 91% (171) | CellScope Oto | iOS |
| Traditional group: 61/96 | ||||||||||
| Chan et al. [ | RCT | USA | ED | AOM | 1390 (614/776) | Smartphone group: 123/614 | 46.79 month (40.68) | Resident | CellScope Oto | iOS |
| Traditional group: 146/776 | ||||||||||
| Mousseau et al. [ | RCT | Canada | ED | AOM | 94 * (188/188) | Smartphone group: 140/188 | 2.25 year (0.61) | Resident | CellScope Oto | iOS |
| Traditional group: 129/188 | ||||||||||
| Schuter-Bruce et al. [ | RCT | UK | Simulation | AOM | 42 (20/22) | Smartphone group: 15/20 | Not applicable | Medical student | TYMPA smartphone otoscope | iOS |
| Traditional group: 5/22 | ||||||||||
| Perforation | 42 (20/22) | Smartphone group: 13/20 | ||||||||
| Traditional group: 3/22 | ||||||||||
| VTI | 42 (20/22) | Smartphone group: 20/20 | ||||||||
| Traditional group: 20/22 | ||||||||||
| Normal | 42 (20/22) | Smartphone group: 19/20 | ||||||||
| Traditional group: 11/22 |
* The study was designed as a crossover randomized controlled trial. Ninety-four examinees were randomly assigned to undergo smartphone-enabled otoscopy followed by traditional otoscopy or traditional otoscopy followed by smartphone-enabled otoscopy.
Figure 3Overall comparison between smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy [11,41,42,43].
Figure 4Sensitivity analysis after excluding the simulation study [11,41,42].
Figure 5Sensitivity analysis after excluding normal ear conditions [11,41,42,43].
Figure 6Confidence comparison between smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy [11,43].
Figure 7Influence analysis of the overall result of comparison between smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy [11,41,42,43].
Figure 8Trial sequential analysis (TSA) of overall comparison between smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy.
Figure 9Trial sequential analysis (TSA) of sensitivity analysis by excluding the simulation study.
Figure 10Trial sequential analysis (TSA) of sensitivity analysis by excluding normal ear conditions.
Figure 11TSA of the confidence comparison between smartphone-enabled otoscopy and traditional otoscopy.