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Assessing Vasculitis in Giant Cell Arteritis by Ultrasound: Results of OMERACT Patient-based Reliability Exercises.

Authors :
Schäfer VS
Chrysidis S
Dejaco C
Duftner C
Iagnocco A
Bruyn GA
Carrara G
D'Agostino MA
De Miguel E
Diamantopoulos AP
Fredberg U
Hartung W
Hocevar A
Juche A
Kermani TA
Koster MJ
Lorenzen T
Macchioni P
Milchert M
Døhn UM
Mukhtyar C
Ponte C
Ramiro S
Scirè CA
Terslev L
Warrington KJ
Dasgupta B
Schmidt WA
Source :
The Journal of rheumatology [J Rheumatol] 2018 Aug; Vol. 45 (9), pp. 1289-1295. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Jul 01.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objective: To test the reliability of Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Clinical Trials (OMERACT) consensus-based ultrasound definitions for normal and vasculitic temporal and axillary arteries in patients with giant cell arteritis (GCA) and in controls.<br />Methods: A preliminary 1-day meeting and a full 3-day meeting fulfilling OMERACT Ultrasound Group guidelines were held. Temporal and axillary arteries were examined at 2 timepoints by 12 sonographers on 4 patients with GCA and 2 controls. The aim was to test inter- and intrareader reliability for normal findings, halo sign, and compression sign. In both meetings, patients had established GCA. Pathology was more recent in the full meeting, which was preceded by 6 h of training. Scanning time was 15-20 min instead of 10-13 min.<br />Results: In the preliminary exercise, interreader reliabilities were fair to moderate for the overall diagnosis of GCA (Light κ 0.29-0.51), and poor to fair for identifying vasculitis in the respective anatomical segments (Light κ 0.02-0.46). Intrareader reliabilities were moderate (Cohen κ 0.32-0.64). In the main exercise, interreader reliability was good to excellent (Light κ 0.76-0.86) for the overall diagnosis of GCA, and moderate to good (Light κ 0.46-0.71) for identifying vasculitis in the respective anatomical segments. Intrareader reliability was excellent for diagnosis of GCA (Cohen κ 0.91) and good (Cohen κ 0.71-0.80) for the anatomical segments.<br />Conclusion: OMERACT-derived definitions of halo and compression signs of temporal and axillary arteries are reliable in recent-onset GCA if experienced sonographers (> 300 examinations) have 15-20 min for a standardized examination with prior training and apply > 15 MHz probes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0315-162X
Volume :
45
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of rheumatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29961687
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.171428