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Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management

OBJECTIVES: Lung-RADS represents a categorical system published by the American College of Radiology to standardise management in lung cancer screening. The purpose of the study was to quantify how well readers agree in assigning Lung-RADS categories to screening CTs; secondary goals were to assess...

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Autores principales: van Riel, Sarah J., Jacobs, Colin, Scholten, Ernst Th., Wittenberg, Rianne, Winkler Wille, Mathilde M., de Hoop, Bartjan, Sprengers, Ralf, Mets, Onno M., Geurts, Bram, Prokop, Mathias, Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia, van Ginneken, Bram
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6302878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30066248
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-018-5599-4
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author van Riel, Sarah J.
Jacobs, Colin
Scholten, Ernst Th.
Wittenberg, Rianne
Winkler Wille, Mathilde M.
de Hoop, Bartjan
Sprengers, Ralf
Mets, Onno M.
Geurts, Bram
Prokop, Mathias
Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia
van Ginneken, Bram
author_facet van Riel, Sarah J.
Jacobs, Colin
Scholten, Ernst Th.
Wittenberg, Rianne
Winkler Wille, Mathilde M.
de Hoop, Bartjan
Sprengers, Ralf
Mets, Onno M.
Geurts, Bram
Prokop, Mathias
Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia
van Ginneken, Bram
author_sort van Riel, Sarah J.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Lung-RADS represents a categorical system published by the American College of Radiology to standardise management in lung cancer screening. The purpose of the study was to quantify how well readers agree in assigning Lung-RADS categories to screening CTs; secondary goals were to assess causes of disagreement and evaluate its impact on patient management. METHODS: For the observer study, 80 baseline and 80 follow-up scans were randomly selected from the NLST trial covering all Lung-RADS categories in an equal distribution. Agreement of seven observers was analysed using Cohen’s kappa statistics. Discrepancies were correlated with patient management, test performance and diagnosis of malignancy within the scan year. RESULTS: Pairwise interobserver agreement was substantial (mean kappa 0.67, 95% CI 0.58–0.77). Lung-RADS category disagreement was seen in approximately one-third (29%, 971) of 3360 reading pairs, resulting in different patient management in 8% (278/3360). Out of the 91 reading pairs that referred to scans with a tumour diagnosis within 1 year, discrepancies in only two would have resulted in a substantial management change. CONCLUSIONS: Assignment of lung cancer screening CT scans to Lung-RADS categories achieves substantial interobserver agreement. Impact of disagreement on categorisation of malignant nodules was low. KEY POINTS: • Lung-RADS categorisation of low-dose lung screening CTs achieved substantial interobserver agreement. • Major cause for disagreement was assigning a different nodule as risk-dominant. • Disagreement led to a different follow-up time in 8% of reading pairs.
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spelling pubmed-63028782019-01-04 Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management van Riel, Sarah J. Jacobs, Colin Scholten, Ernst Th. Wittenberg, Rianne Winkler Wille, Mathilde M. de Hoop, Bartjan Sprengers, Ralf Mets, Onno M. Geurts, Bram Prokop, Mathias Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia van Ginneken, Bram Eur Radiol Chest OBJECTIVES: Lung-RADS represents a categorical system published by the American College of Radiology to standardise management in lung cancer screening. The purpose of the study was to quantify how well readers agree in assigning Lung-RADS categories to screening CTs; secondary goals were to assess causes of disagreement and evaluate its impact on patient management. METHODS: For the observer study, 80 baseline and 80 follow-up scans were randomly selected from the NLST trial covering all Lung-RADS categories in an equal distribution. Agreement of seven observers was analysed using Cohen’s kappa statistics. Discrepancies were correlated with patient management, test performance and diagnosis of malignancy within the scan year. RESULTS: Pairwise interobserver agreement was substantial (mean kappa 0.67, 95% CI 0.58–0.77). Lung-RADS category disagreement was seen in approximately one-third (29%, 971) of 3360 reading pairs, resulting in different patient management in 8% (278/3360). Out of the 91 reading pairs that referred to scans with a tumour diagnosis within 1 year, discrepancies in only two would have resulted in a substantial management change. CONCLUSIONS: Assignment of lung cancer screening CT scans to Lung-RADS categories achieves substantial interobserver agreement. Impact of disagreement on categorisation of malignant nodules was low. KEY POINTS: • Lung-RADS categorisation of low-dose lung screening CTs achieved substantial interobserver agreement. • Major cause for disagreement was assigning a different nodule as risk-dominant. • Disagreement led to a different follow-up time in 8% of reading pairs. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2018-07-31 2019 /pmc/articles/PMC6302878/ /pubmed/30066248 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-018-5599-4 Text en © The Author(s) 2018 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Chest
van Riel, Sarah J.
Jacobs, Colin
Scholten, Ernst Th.
Wittenberg, Rianne
Winkler Wille, Mathilde M.
de Hoop, Bartjan
Sprengers, Ralf
Mets, Onno M.
Geurts, Bram
Prokop, Mathias
Schaefer-Prokop, Cornelia
van Ginneken, Bram
Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title_full Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title_fullStr Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title_full_unstemmed Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title_short Observer variability for Lung-RADS categorisation of lung cancer screening CTs: impact on patient management
title_sort observer variability for lung-rads categorisation of lung cancer screening cts: impact on patient management
topic Chest
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6302878/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30066248
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-018-5599-4
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