Abstract

BackgroundKnowledge of the accuracy of chest radiograph findings in acute lower respiratory infection in children is important when making clinical decisions.MethodsI conducted a systematic review of agreement between and within observers in the detection of radiographic features of acute lower respiratory infections in children, and described the quality of the design and reporting of studies, whether included or excluded from the review.Included studies were those of observer variation in the interpretation of radiographic features of lower respiratory infection in children (neonatal nurseries excluded) in which radiographs were read independently and a clinical population was studied. I searched MEDLINE, HealthSTAR and HSRPROJ databases (1966 to 1999), handsearched the reference lists of identified papers and contacted authors of identified studies. I performed the data extraction alone.ResultsTen studies of observer interpretation of radiographic features of lower respiratory infection in children were identified. Seven of the studies satisfied four or more of the seven design and reporting criteria. Six studies met the inclusion criteria for the review. Inter-observer agreement varied with the radiographic feature examined. Kappa statistics ranged from around 0.80 for individual radiographic features to 0.27–0.38 for bacterial vs viral etiology.ConclusionsLittle information was identified on observer agreement on radiographic features of lower respiratory tract infections in children. Agreement varied with the features assessed from "fair" to "very good". Aspects of the quality of the methods and reporting need attention in future studies, particularly the description of criteria for radiographic features.

Highlights

  • Knowledge of the accuracy of chest radiograph findings in acute lower respiratory infection in children is important when making clinical decisions

  • Inter-observer agreement varied with the radiographic feature examined

  • Little information was identified on observer agreement on radiographic features of lower respiratory tract infections in children

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge of the accuracy of chest radiograph findings in acute lower respiratory infection in children is important when making clinical decisions. Chest radiography is a very common investigation in children with lower respiratory infection, and knowledge of the diagnostic accuracy of radiograph interpretation is important when basing clinical decisions on the findings. Inter- and intra-observer agreement in the interpretation of the radiographs are necessary components of diagnostic accuracy. Observer variation is not sufficient for diagnostic accuracy. The key element of such accuracy is the concordance of the radiological interpretation with the presence or absence of pneumonia. There is seldom a suitable available reference standard for pneumonia (such as histological or gross anatomical findings) against which to BMC Medical Imaging 2001, 1:1 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2342/1/1 compare radiographic findings. Diagnostic accuracy needs to be examined indirectly, including assessing observer agreement

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