Clinician-rated quality of video otoscopy recordings and still images for the asynchronous assessment of middle-ear disease

Author:

Alenezi Eman MA12ORCID,Jajko Kathryn2,Reid Allison3,Locatelli-Smith Alessandra3,McMahen Courtney SE12,Tao Karina FM2ORCID,Marsh Julie12,Bright Tess4,Richmond Peter C123,Eikelboom Robert H567,Brennan-Jones Christopher G123

Affiliation:

1. The University of Western Australia, Australia

2. Telethon Kids Institute, The University of Western Australia, Australia

3. Perth Children’s Hospital, Australia

4. International Centre for Evidence in Disability, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK

5. Ear Sciences Centre, The University of Western Australia, Australia

6. Ear Science Institute Australia, Australia

7. Department of Speech Language Pathology and Audiology, University of Pretoria, South Africa

Abstract

Introduction Video otoscopy plays an important role in improving access to ear health services. This study investigated the clinician-rated quality of video otoscopy recordings and still images, and compared their suitability for asynchronous diagnosis of middle-ear disease. Methods Two hundred and eighty video otoscopy image–recording pairs were collected from 150 children (aged six months to 15 years) by an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) specialist, audiologists, and trained research assistants, and independently rated by an audiologist and ENT surgeon. On a five-point scale, clinicians rated the cerumen amount, field of view, quality, focus, light, and gave an overall rating, and asked whether they could make an accurate diagnosis for both still images and recordings. Results More video otoscopy recordings were rated as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’ compared to still images across all domains. The mean difference between the two otoscopic procedures ratings was significant across almost all domains ( p < 0.05), except ‘cerumen amount’. The suitability to make a diagnosis significantly improved when using recordings (p<0.05). Younger participant age was found to have a significant, negative impact on the ratings across all domains ( p < 0.03). The role of the tester conducting video otoscopy did not have a significant impact on the ratings. Discussion Video otoscopy recordings were found to provide clearer views of the tympanic membrane and increase the ability to make diagnoses, compared to still images, for both audiologists and ENT surgeons. Research assistants with limited practice were able to obtain video otoscopy images and recordings that were comparable to the ones obtained by clinicians.

Funder

Telethon Kids Institute

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Informatics

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