Abstract
The aim of this paper was to develop, validate, and assess the reliability of a clinical index for assessing post-radiation dentition breakdown. An expert panel of four dentists with expertise in post-radiation patient care, oral radiology, and mineralized tissues reviewed a series of clinical photographs (n = 60) depicting a wide range of post-radiation lesions varying in size, severity, and location. Based on panel input related to lesion severity rankings and cut-points along a continuum of destruction, a semiquantitative, ordinal lesion scale was developed. A companion scale was developed to account for existing restorations. The index was then reviewed by a separate panel of dental clinician/researchers for confirmation of face and content validity and was refined based on their input. Following index approval by the expert and confirmatory panels, the index was evaluated for test-retest reliability by two educator/clinicians. After a brief calibration session, examiners reviewed and independently scored a second series of lesion images (n = 60). One week later, the same examiners independently scored the same images displayed in a different order. Inter- and intra-rater reliability and agreement were assessed (Spearman r and Kappa statistic). Respective to sessions 1 and 2, inter-rater reliability values were r = 0.97 and r = 0.98, with Kappa values of kappa = 0.93 and kappa = 0.95. Respective intra-rater reliability and agreement values were 0.99 and 0.98 (rater 1), and 0.98 and 0.95 (rater 2). A new index was developed and subsequently demonstrated face validity and excellent inter- and intra-rater reliability for potentially evaluating the severity of post-radiation dentition breakdown.
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