Abstract

BackgroundKnowledge about the assessment reliability of common cervical spine changes is a prerequisite for precise and consistent communication about Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) findings. The purpose of this study was to determine the inter- and intra-rater reliability of degenerative findings when assessing cervical spine MRI.MethodsFifty cervical spine MRIs from subjects with neck pain were used. A radiologist, a chiropractor and a second-year resident of rheumatology independently assessed kyphosis, disc height, disc contour, vertebral endplate signal changes, spinal canal stenosis, neural foraminal stenosis, and osteoarthritis of the uncovertebral and zygapophyseal joints. An evaluation manual was composed containing classifications and illustrative examples, and ten of the MRIs were evaluated twice followed by consensus meetings to refine the classifications. Next, the three readers independently assessed the full sample. Reliability measures were reported using prevalence estimates and unweighted kappa (Κ) statistics.ResultsThe overall inter-rater reliability was substantial (Κ ≥ 0.61) for the majority of variables and moderate only for zygapophyseal osteoarthritis (Κ = 0.56). Intra-rater reliability estimates were higher for all findings.ConclusionsThe present classifications for some of the most common cervical degenerative findings yielded mainly substantial inter-rater reliability estimates and substantial to almost perfect intra-rater reliability estimates. .Trial registrationRegional Data Protection Agency (J.no. 1–16–02-86-16). The letter of exemption from the Regional Ethical Committee is available from the author on request (case no. 86 / 2017).

Highlights

  • Knowledge about the assessment reliability of common cervical spine changes is a prerequisite for precise and consistent communication about Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) findings

  • For the remaining degenerative findings, prevalence estimates allowed for kappa statistics including one to six anatomical sites (e.g. 2 disc levels ~ 100 observations included in Κ analysis for spinal canal stenosis)

  • These reliability estimates reflect that the observed agreement notably exceeds the agreement that can be expected by chance

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge about the assessment reliability of common cervical spine changes is a prerequisite for precise and consistent communication about Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) findings. The purpose of this study was to determine the inter- and intra-rater reliability of degenerative findings when assessing cervical spine MRI. When communicating MRI findings, the importance of consistency and precision remains unaltered. Both for academic and clinical purposes, a prerequisite for such consistency and precision is reliability in MRI assessments. In the case of MRI, this means that while the images do not change, reliability reflects whether the image interpretation remains the same when assessed by different raters (inter-rater reliability) or by the same rater at different times (intra-rater reliability)

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