Abstract
Reading hand and foot X-rays in rheumatoid arthritis patients is difficult and time-consuming. In research, physicians use the modified Sharp van der Heijde Sharp (mvdH) score by reading of hand and foot radiographs. The aim of this study was to create a new method of determining the mvdH via eye tracking and to study its concordance with the mvdH score. We created a new method of quantifying the mvdH score based on reading time of a reader monitored via eye tracking (Tobii Pro Lab software) after training with the aid of a metronome. Radiographs were read twice by the trained eye-tracking reader and once by an experienced reference radiologist. A total of 440 joints were selected; 416 could be interpreted for erosion, and 396 could be interpreted for joint space narrowing (JSN) when read by eye tracking (eye tracking could not measure the time spent when two pathological joints were too close together). The agreement between eye tracking mvdH Sharp score and classical mvdH Sharp score yes (at least one erosion or JSN) versus no (no erosion or no JSN) was excellent for both erosions (kappa 0.97; 95% CI: 0.96-0.99) and JSN (kappa: 0.95; 95% CI: 0.93-0.097). This agreement by class (0 to 10) remained excellent for both erosions (kappa 0.82; 95% CI: 0.79-0.0.85) and JSN (kappa: 0.68; 95% CI: 0.65-0.0.71). To conclude, eye-tracking reading correlates strongly with classical mvdH-Sharp and is useful for assessing severity, segmenting joints and establishing a rapid score for lesions.
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