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Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study

BACKGROUND: RSNA expert consensus guidelines provide a framework for reporting CT findings related to COVID-19, but have had limited multireader validation. PURPOSE: To assess the performance of the RSNA guidelines and quantify interobserver variability in application of the guidelines in patients u...

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Autores principales: Som, Avik, Lang, Min, Yeung, Tristan, Carey, Denston, Garrana, Sherief, Mendoza, Dexter P., Flores, Efren J., Li, Matthew D., Sharma, Amita, McDermott, Shaunagh, Shepard, Jo-Anne O., Little, Brent P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Radiological Society of North America 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7484923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33778625
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/ryct.2020200276
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author Som, Avik
Lang, Min
Yeung, Tristan
Carey, Denston
Garrana, Sherief
Mendoza, Dexter P.
Flores, Efren J.
Li, Matthew D.
Sharma, Amita
McDermott, Shaunagh
Shepard, Jo-Anne O.
Little, Brent P.
author_facet Som, Avik
Lang, Min
Yeung, Tristan
Carey, Denston
Garrana, Sherief
Mendoza, Dexter P.
Flores, Efren J.
Li, Matthew D.
Sharma, Amita
McDermott, Shaunagh
Shepard, Jo-Anne O.
Little, Brent P.
author_sort Som, Avik
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: RSNA expert consensus guidelines provide a framework for reporting CT findings related to COVID-19, but have had limited multireader validation. PURPOSE: To assess the performance of the RSNA guidelines and quantify interobserver variability in application of the guidelines in patients undergoing chest CT for suspected COVID-19 pneumonia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective search from 1/15/20 to 3/30/20 identified 89 consecutive CT scans whose radiological report mentioned COVID-19. One positive or two negative RT-PCR tests for COVID-19 were considered the gold standard for diagnosis. Each chest CT scan was evaluated using RSNA guidelines by 9 readers (6 fellowship trained thoracic radiologists and 3 radiology resident trainees). Clinical information was obtained from the electronic medical record. RESULTS: There was strong concordance of findings between radiology training levels with agreement ranging from 60 to 86% among attendings and trainees (kappa 0.43 to 0.86). Sensitivity and specificity of “typical” CT findings for COVID-19 per the RSNA guidelines were on average 86% (range 72%-94%) and 80.2% (range 75-93%), respectively. Combined “typical” and “indeterminate” findings had a sensitivity of 97.5% (range 94-100%) and specificity of 54.7% (range 37-62%). A total of 163 disagreements were seen out of 801 observations (79.6% total agreement). Uncertainty in classification primarily derived from difficulty in ascertaining peripheral distribution, multiple dominant disease processes, or minimal disease. CONCLUSION: The “typical appearance” category for COVID-19 CT reporting has an average sensitivity of 86% and specificity rate of 80%. There is reasonable interreader agreement and good reproducibility across various levels of experience.
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spelling pubmed-74849232020-09-11 Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study Som, Avik Lang, Min Yeung, Tristan Carey, Denston Garrana, Sherief Mendoza, Dexter P. Flores, Efren J. Li, Matthew D. Sharma, Amita McDermott, Shaunagh Shepard, Jo-Anne O. Little, Brent P. Radiol Cardiothorac Imaging Original Research BACKGROUND: RSNA expert consensus guidelines provide a framework for reporting CT findings related to COVID-19, but have had limited multireader validation. PURPOSE: To assess the performance of the RSNA guidelines and quantify interobserver variability in application of the guidelines in patients undergoing chest CT for suspected COVID-19 pneumonia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective search from 1/15/20 to 3/30/20 identified 89 consecutive CT scans whose radiological report mentioned COVID-19. One positive or two negative RT-PCR tests for COVID-19 were considered the gold standard for diagnosis. Each chest CT scan was evaluated using RSNA guidelines by 9 readers (6 fellowship trained thoracic radiologists and 3 radiology resident trainees). Clinical information was obtained from the electronic medical record. RESULTS: There was strong concordance of findings between radiology training levels with agreement ranging from 60 to 86% among attendings and trainees (kappa 0.43 to 0.86). Sensitivity and specificity of “typical” CT findings for COVID-19 per the RSNA guidelines were on average 86% (range 72%-94%) and 80.2% (range 75-93%), respectively. Combined “typical” and “indeterminate” findings had a sensitivity of 97.5% (range 94-100%) and specificity of 54.7% (range 37-62%). A total of 163 disagreements were seen out of 801 observations (79.6% total agreement). Uncertainty in classification primarily derived from difficulty in ascertaining peripheral distribution, multiple dominant disease processes, or minimal disease. CONCLUSION: The “typical appearance” category for COVID-19 CT reporting has an average sensitivity of 86% and specificity rate of 80%. There is reasonable interreader agreement and good reproducibility across various levels of experience. Radiological Society of North America 2020-09-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7484923/ /pubmed/33778625 http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/ryct.2020200276 Text en 2020 by the Radiological Society of North America, Inc. This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic or until permissions are revoked in writing. Upon expiration of these permissions, PMC is granted a perpetual license to make this article available via PMC and Europe PMC, consistent with existing copyright protections.
spellingShingle Original Research
Som, Avik
Lang, Min
Yeung, Tristan
Carey, Denston
Garrana, Sherief
Mendoza, Dexter P.
Flores, Efren J.
Li, Matthew D.
Sharma, Amita
McDermott, Shaunagh
Shepard, Jo-Anne O.
Little, Brent P.
Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title_full Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title_fullStr Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title_short Implementation of the Radiological Society of North America Expert Consensus Guidelines on Reporting Chest CT Findings Related to COVID-19: A Multireader Performance Study
title_sort implementation of the radiological society of north america expert consensus guidelines on reporting chest ct findings related to covid-19: a multireader performance study
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7484923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33778625
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/ryct.2020200276
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