Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3981562 Clinical Radiology 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•ABER-view does not improve the diagnostic performance of TASI related MRA.•Consensus assessment of shoulder MRA contributes to diagnostic performance improvement.•The radiologist's experience level also contributes to MRA performance improvement.

AimTo prospectively evaluate the influence of observer experience, consensus assessment, and abduction and external rotation (ABER) view on the diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance arthrography (MRA) in patients with traumatic anterior-shoulder instability (TASI).Materials and methodsFifty-eight MRA examinations (of which 51 had additional ABER views) were assessed by six radiologists (R1–R6) and three teams (T1–T3) with different experience levels, using a seven-lesion standardized scoring form. Forty-five out of 58 MRA examination findings were surgically confirmed. Kappa coefficients, sensitivity, specificity, and differences in percent agreement or correct diagnosis (p-value, McNemar's test) were calculated per lesion and overall per seven lesion types to assess diagnostic reproducibility and accuracy.ResultsOverall kappa ranged from poor (k = 0.17) to moderate (k = 0.53), sensitivity from 30.6–63.5%, and specificity from 73.6–89.9%. Overall, the most experienced radiologists (R1–R2) and teams (T2–T3) agreed significantly more than the lesser experienced radiologists (R3–R4: p = 0.014, R5–R6; p = 0.018) and teams (T2–T3: p = 0.007). The most experienced radiologist (R1, R2, R3) and teams (T1, T2) were also consistently more accurate than the lesser experienced radiologists (R4, R5, R6) and team (T3). Significant differences were found between R1–R4 (p = 0.012), R3–R4 (p = 0.03), and T2–T3 (p = 0.014). The overall performance of consensus assessment was systematically higher than individual assessment. Significant differences were established between T1–T2 and radiologists R3–R4 (p<0.001, p = 0.001) and between T2 and R3 (p<0.001/p = 0.001) or R4 (p = 0.050). No overall significant differences were found between the radiologists' assessments with and without ABER.ConclusionThe addition of ABER does not significantly improve overall diagnostic performance. The radiologist's experience level and consensus assessment do contribute to higher reproducibility and accuracy.

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