Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme

Objective To evaluate the impact of a standardised training programme including equipment adjustment for experienced musculoskeletal ultrasonographers without previous experience in vascular ultrasound (US) on the reliability of US in the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA).Methods In this prosp...

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Main Authors: Andreas P Diamantopoulos, Ulrich Fredberg, Knud Larsen, Uffe Møller Døhn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-11-01
Series:RMD Open
Online Access:https://rmdopen.bmj.com/content/6/3/e001337.full
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spelling doaj-83bb1192a91c406b87ee298f05303a512021-04-03T12:00:05ZengBMJ Publishing GroupRMD Open2056-59332020-11-016310.1136/rmdopen-2020-001337Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programmeAndreas P Diamantopoulos0Ulrich Fredberg1Knud Larsen2Uffe Møller Døhn3Department of Rheumatology, Martina Hansens Hospital, Sandvika, NorwayDepartment of Clinical Research, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, DenmarkDepartment of Ear Nose and Throat , Southwest Jutland Hospital Esbjerg, Esbjerg, DenmarkCopenhagen Center for Arthritis Research, Center for Rheumatology and Spine Diseases, Rigshospitalet Glostrup, Glostrup, DenmarkObjective To evaluate the impact of a standardised training programme including equipment adjustment for experienced musculoskeletal ultrasonographers without previous experience in vascular ultrasound (US) on the reliability of US in the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA).Methods In this prospective, non-interventional observational cohort study, patients suspected of GCA were evaluated by US by one of five rheumatologists with long-standing experience in musculoskeletal US (>8 years), trained using a standardised training programme including equipment adjustment. Images of cranial and large vessels were subsequently evaluated first by the performing ultrasonographer and thereafter by a blinded external expert (gold standard).Results In three Danish centres, 112 patients suspected of GCA were included. According to the external expert, vasculitis changes were seen in 66 patients, in 45 of them with only cranial involvement, in 14 with both cranial and large vessel involvement, while in seven patients isolated large vessel vasculitis was found. The reliability was excellent between the local ultrasonographer and the US expert for the overall GCA diagnosis regarding the diagnosis of cranial and for large vessel GCA, with an interobserver agreement of 95–96%, mean kappa values of 0.88–0.92 (95% CI 0.78 to 0.99). Excellent reliability (mean kappa 0.86–1.00) was also found for the US examination of the individual arteries (temporal, facial, common carotid and axillary).Conclusion The US training programme resulted in excellent agreement between trainees and an expert in patients suspected of GCA and may thus be applicable for implementation of vascular US in clinical practice.https://rmdopen.bmj.com/content/6/3/e001337.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreas P Diamantopoulos
Ulrich Fredberg
Knud Larsen
Uffe Møller Døhn
spellingShingle Andreas P Diamantopoulos
Ulrich Fredberg
Knud Larsen
Uffe Møller Døhn
Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
RMD Open
author_facet Andreas P Diamantopoulos
Ulrich Fredberg
Knud Larsen
Uffe Møller Døhn
author_sort Andreas P Diamantopoulos
title Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
title_short Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
title_full Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
title_fullStr Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
title_full_unstemmed Vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
title_sort vascular ultrasound for the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis: a reliability and agreement study based on a standardised training programme
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series RMD Open
issn 2056-5933
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Objective To evaluate the impact of a standardised training programme including equipment adjustment for experienced musculoskeletal ultrasonographers without previous experience in vascular ultrasound (US) on the reliability of US in the diagnosis of giant cell arteritis (GCA).Methods In this prospective, non-interventional observational cohort study, patients suspected of GCA were evaluated by US by one of five rheumatologists with long-standing experience in musculoskeletal US (>8 years), trained using a standardised training programme including equipment adjustment. Images of cranial and large vessels were subsequently evaluated first by the performing ultrasonographer and thereafter by a blinded external expert (gold standard).Results In three Danish centres, 112 patients suspected of GCA were included. According to the external expert, vasculitis changes were seen in 66 patients, in 45 of them with only cranial involvement, in 14 with both cranial and large vessel involvement, while in seven patients isolated large vessel vasculitis was found. The reliability was excellent between the local ultrasonographer and the US expert for the overall GCA diagnosis regarding the diagnosis of cranial and for large vessel GCA, with an interobserver agreement of 95–96%, mean kappa values of 0.88–0.92 (95% CI 0.78 to 0.99). Excellent reliability (mean kappa 0.86–1.00) was also found for the US examination of the individual arteries (temporal, facial, common carotid and axillary).Conclusion The US training programme resulted in excellent agreement between trainees and an expert in patients suspected of GCA and may thus be applicable for implementation of vascular US in clinical practice.
url https://rmdopen.bmj.com/content/6/3/e001337.full
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