Abstract

To assess the effect of clinical history on the interpretation of endodontic disease in dental cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). A reader performance study of an image test-set was undertaken using a factorial, free-response, crossover design, accounting for the independent variables: case type, case severity, reader type, and reading modality. Twenty-three readers interpreted 60 CBCT images twice over two reading sessions using a balanced design, once with access to clinical history and once without, where 30 in each session included history. Lesion localisations, specificity, false-positive marks and the weighted alternative free-response receiver operating characteristic (wAFROC1) figure of merit were calculated. Clinical history had no significant effect on specificity and false-positive rates in non-diseased cases (p>0.05), but improved lesion localisation in subtle and obvious diseased cases (p<0.01). wAFROC1 values were higher with clinical history for subtle (0.58 versus 0.48; p<0.001) and obvious (0.77 versus 0.71; p=0.006) diseased categories. No associations were observed between clinical history and both readers' years of experience and reading volume in the non-diseased categories. Readers with fewer (p=0.03) and moderate (p=0.008) years of experience and low (p=0.002) CBCT reading volume demonstrated better lesion localisation in subtle diseased cases when clinical history was available. Clinical history improved the interpretation of CBCT images with disease without affecting the interpretation of images without disease. Less and moderately experienced readers and low-volume readers benefitted more from availability of clinical history.

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