Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system

Abstract Background Grading of degeneration of the cervical spine is of great clinical value, considering the vast amount of radiological investigations that are being done with this query. Despite the fact that Computed Tomography (CT) is frequently used in clinical practice there is today no user-...

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Main Authors: Eric Rydman, Sara Bankler, Sari Ponzer, Hans Järnbert-Pettersson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:BMC Medical Imaging
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-019-0342-4
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spelling doaj-9cef0403cfdc4e5087f47350e600655e2020-11-25T03:18:09ZengBMCBMC Medical Imaging1471-23422019-05-011911910.1186/s12880-019-0342-4Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring systemEric Rydman0Sara Bankler1Sari Ponzer2Hans Järnbert-Pettersson3Department of Clinical Science and Education, Södersjukhuset, Karolinska InstitutetDepartment of RadiologyDepartment of Clinical Science and Education, Södersjukhuset, Karolinska InstitutetDepartment of Clinical Science and Education, Södersjukhuset, Karolinska InstitutetAbstract Background Grading of degeneration of the cervical spine is of great clinical value, considering the vast amount of radiological investigations that are being done with this query. Despite the fact that Computed Tomography (CT) is frequently used in clinical practice there is today no user-friendly and reliable scoring system for assessment of cervical spondylosis on CT-scans available. The aim of this study was to establish a scoring system for cervical spondylosis based on CT-scans and to test it for reliability. Methods Twenty adult patients undergoing CT of the cervical spine due to neck pain following a motor vehicle accident were included in the study. Three independent raters, i.e. one orthopedic surgeon and two radiologists, assessed their CT-scans. Two of the raters repeated the assessments after three months. A radiographic-based scoring system for cervical disc degeneration, addressing disc height, osteophytes and endplate sclerosis, was applied on CT and tested for reliability. A pre-existing, reliable CT-based scoring system for facet joint degeneration, considering joint space narrowing, osteophytes and irregularity of the articular surface was modified and reevaluated. This in order to develop a coherent CT-based total degeneration score for cervical spondylosis. Results The scoring systems for cervical disc degeneration and facet joint degeneration both exhibited an acceptable or better level of strength of agreement regarding intra- and interrater agreement. The total disc degeneration score showed a moderate level of inter-rater reliability with a kappa-value of 0.47 and a good intra-rater agreement with intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) of 0.67 and 0.60 for the two raters performing the assessments. The total facet joint degeneration score showed a moderate level of inter-rater reliability (kappa 0.54) and an excellent intra-rater agreement with ICC 0.75 for one of the raters and fair for the other rater (ICC 0.54). When the total disc and facet joint degeneration score were classified into a three-point total degeneration score the inter-rater agreement was 0.695 and the ICC 0.82 and 0.73 respectively. Conclusions This coherent scoring system assessing both disc degeneration and facet joint degeneration on CT-scans of the cervical spine was shown to meet the standards of reliability.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-019-0342-4Disc degenerationNeck pain -facet joint degeneration - computed tomographyCervical spineScoring system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Rydman
Sara Bankler
Sari Ponzer
Hans Järnbert-Pettersson
spellingShingle Eric Rydman
Sara Bankler
Sari Ponzer
Hans Järnbert-Pettersson
Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
BMC Medical Imaging
Disc degeneration
Neck pain -facet joint degeneration - computed tomography
Cervical spine
Scoring system
author_facet Eric Rydman
Sara Bankler
Sari Ponzer
Hans Järnbert-Pettersson
author_sort Eric Rydman
title Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
title_short Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
title_full Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
title_fullStr Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent CT-based scoring system
title_sort quantifying cervical spondylosis: reliability testing of a coherent ct-based scoring system
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Imaging
issn 1471-2342
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Grading of degeneration of the cervical spine is of great clinical value, considering the vast amount of radiological investigations that are being done with this query. Despite the fact that Computed Tomography (CT) is frequently used in clinical practice there is today no user-friendly and reliable scoring system for assessment of cervical spondylosis on CT-scans available. The aim of this study was to establish a scoring system for cervical spondylosis based on CT-scans and to test it for reliability. Methods Twenty adult patients undergoing CT of the cervical spine due to neck pain following a motor vehicle accident were included in the study. Three independent raters, i.e. one orthopedic surgeon and two radiologists, assessed their CT-scans. Two of the raters repeated the assessments after three months. A radiographic-based scoring system for cervical disc degeneration, addressing disc height, osteophytes and endplate sclerosis, was applied on CT and tested for reliability. A pre-existing, reliable CT-based scoring system for facet joint degeneration, considering joint space narrowing, osteophytes and irregularity of the articular surface was modified and reevaluated. This in order to develop a coherent CT-based total degeneration score for cervical spondylosis. Results The scoring systems for cervical disc degeneration and facet joint degeneration both exhibited an acceptable or better level of strength of agreement regarding intra- and interrater agreement. The total disc degeneration score showed a moderate level of inter-rater reliability with a kappa-value of 0.47 and a good intra-rater agreement with intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) of 0.67 and 0.60 for the two raters performing the assessments. The total facet joint degeneration score showed a moderate level of inter-rater reliability (kappa 0.54) and an excellent intra-rater agreement with ICC 0.75 for one of the raters and fair for the other rater (ICC 0.54). When the total disc and facet joint degeneration score were classified into a three-point total degeneration score the inter-rater agreement was 0.695 and the ICC 0.82 and 0.73 respectively. Conclusions This coherent scoring system assessing both disc degeneration and facet joint degeneration on CT-scans of the cervical spine was shown to meet the standards of reliability.
topic Disc degeneration
Neck pain -facet joint degeneration - computed tomography
Cervical spine
Scoring system
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12880-019-0342-4
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