Interrater Agreement of CT Grading of Blunt Splenic Injuries: Does the AAST Grading Need to Be Reimagined?

Author:

Adams-McGavin R. Chris1ORCID,Tafur Monica23,Vlachou Paraskevi A.23,Wu Matthew23,Brassil Michael23,Crivellaro Priscila23ORCID,Lin Hui-Ming2ORCID,Gomez David145,Colak Errol234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Temetry Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

2. Department of Medical Imaging, Unity Health Toronto, St Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada

3. Department of Medical Imaging, Temetry Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

4. Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada

5. Division of General Surgery, Unity Health Toronto, St Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada

Abstract

Introduction: The Revised Organ Injury Scale (OIS) of the American Association for Surgery of Trauma (AAST) is the most widely accepted classification of splenic trauma. The objective of this study was to evaluate inter-rater agreement for CT grading of blunt splenic injuries. Methods: CT scans in adult patients with splenic injuries at a level 1 trauma centre were independently graded by 5 fellowship trained abdominal radiologists using the AAST OIS for splenic injuries – 2018 revision. The inter-rater agreement for AAST CT injury score, as well as low-grade (IIII) versus high-grade (IV-V) splenic injury was assessed. Disagreement in two key clinical scenarios (no injury versus injury, and high versus low grade) were qualitatively reviewed to identify possible sources of disagreement. Results: A total of 610 examinations were included. The inter-rater absolute agreement was low (Fleiss kappa statistic 0.38, P < 0.001), but improved when comparing agreement between low and high grade injuries (Fleiss kappa statistic of 0.77, P < .001). There were 34 cases (5.6%) of minimum two-rater disagreement about no injury vs injury (AAST grade ≥ I). There were 46 cases (7.5%) of minimum two-rater disagreement of low grade (AAST grade I-III) versus high grade (AAST grade IV-V) injuries. Likely sources of disagreement were interpretation of clefts versus lacerations, peri-splenic fluid versus subcapsular hematoma, application of adding multiple low grade injuries to higher grade injuries, and identification of subtle vascular injuries. Conclusion: There is low absolute agreement in grading of splenic injuries using the existing AAST OIS for splenic injuries.

Funder

Division of General Surgery, St Michaels Hospital, Innovation Funds

Odette Professorship in Artificial Intelligence for Medical Imaging, St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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