Multirater Agreement of Arthroscopic Grading of Knee Articular Cartilage

Author:

Marx Robert G.1,Connor Jason2,Lyman Stephen1,Amendola Annunziato3,Andrish Jack T.2,Kaeding Christopher4,McCarty Eric C.5,Parker Richard D.2,Wright Rick W.6,Spindler Kurt P.5

Affiliation:

1. Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York

2. Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio

3. University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa

4. Ohio State Sports Medicine Center, Columbus, Ohio

5. Vanderbilt Sports Medicine Center, Nashville, Tennessee

6. Washington University Orthopedic & Sports Medicine Center, St. Louis, Missouri

Abstract

Background Acute and chronic cartilage injury of the knee has an important impact on prognosis. The validity of the classification of such injuries is critical for prospective multicenter studies. The agreement among multiple surgeons at different institutions for articular cartilage lesions has not been established. Hypothesis Arthroscopic classification of articular cartilage lesions is reliable and reproducible and can be used for multicenter studies involving multiple surgeons. Study Design Cohort study (diagnosis); Level of evidence, 1. Methods A total of 6 surgeons from 5 centers reviewed 31 videos of articular cartilage lesions. With grade 2 and grade 3 combined for the analysis, observed agreement ranged from 81% to 94%, and kappa ranged from 0.34 to 0.87. An additional 22 videos comprising grade 2 and grade 3 lesions were analyzed, and the observed agreement was 80%, with an overall kappa of 0.47. Conclusion Arthroscopic grading of articular cartilage lesions is reproducible among surgeons at different centers. Clinical Relevance Articular cartilage lesions can be reliably classified among surgeons at different sites. Such reliability is important for multicenter clinical research studies involving arthroscopic knee surgery.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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