Defining the Performance of Clinician's Ability to Screen for Laryngeal Mass From Voice

Author:

Wandell Grace M.1ORCID,Law Anthony B.2,Maxin Anthony3ORCID,Ha Vivian T.1,Wilson Emily C.14,Nash Michael G.5,Merati Albert L.1,Whipple Mark E.1ORCID,Meyer Tanya K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery University of Washington School of Medicine Seattle Washington USA

2. Department of Otolaryngology‐Head and Neck Surgery Emory School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

3. School of Medicine Creighton University Nebraska Omaha USA

4. Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

5. Department of Biostatistics University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveDefining a clinician's ability to perceptually identify mass from voice will inform the feasibility, design priorities, and performance standards for tools developed to screen for laryngeal mass from voice. This study defined clinician ability of and examined the impact of expertise on screening for laryngeal mass from voice.Study DesignTask comparison study between experts and nonexperts rating voices for the probability of a laryngeal mass.SettingOnline, remote.MethodsExperts (voice‐focused speech‐language pathologists and otolaryngologists) and nonexperts (general medicine providers) rated 5‐s/i/voice samples (with pathology defined by laryngoscopy) for the probability of laryngeal mass via an online survey. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) estimated interrater and intrarater reliability. Diagnostic performance metrics were calculated. A linear mixed effects model examined the impact of expertise and pathology on ratings.ResultsForty clinicians (21 experts and 19 nonexperts) evaluated 344 voice samples. Experts outperformed nonexperts, with a higher area under the curve (70% vs 61%), sensitivity (49% vs 36%), and specificity (83% vs 77%) (all comparisons p < .05). Interrater reliability was fair for experts and poor for nonexperts (ICC: 0.48 vs 0.34), while intrarater reliability was excellent and good, respectively (ICC: 0.9 and 0.6). The main effects of expertise and underlying pathology were significant in the linear model (p < .001).ConclusionClinicians demonstrate inadequate performance screening for laryngeal mass from voice to use auditory perception for dysphonia triage. Experts' superior performance indicates that there is acoustic information in a voice that may be utilized to detect laryngeal mass based on voice.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

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