Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3466883 | European Journal of Internal Medicine | 2008 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundCorticosteroid-induced lipodystrophy (CIL) is exclusively diagnosed in a subjective manner.ObjectiveTo evaluate the reliability of digital photographs in the diagnosis of CIL.MethodsAll consecutive patients starting long-term, high dosage corticosteroid therapy were photographed at baseline and after 3 months of therapy. At the end of the study, 3 physicians with expertise in corticosteroids classified patients as lipodystrophic yes/no/unclassifiable. Photographs analyses performed by 9 medical readers and evaluation of CIL using visual analog scale (VAS) performed during the M3 visit were compared to this classification.ResultsEighty-eight patients were monitored. Fifty of them were classified by the 3 experts as lipodystrophic and 30 as not lipodystrophic (8 were unclassifiable). Their intra- and inter-observer agreements were moderate or fair (κ coefficient ≤ 0.57) when month 3 photographs were analysed alone and substantial or near perfect (κ coefficient ≥ 0.75) when M3 photographs were analysed beside baseline ones. By comparison with expert consensus, only 3 out of 4 patients were correctly classified using VAS. The AUROC curve and inter-observer agreement significantly improved with experience for the 9 non-experts.ConclusionThe use of digital photographs do better than VAS to evaluate CIL. The accuracy of diagnosis improves with experience. Morphological changes are more important than morphological phenotype.