Back to Search Start Over

The unruptured intracranial aneurysm treatment score: a multidisciplinary consensus

Authors :
Krings, Timo
Roos, Yvo B W E M
Murayama, Yuichi
Koivisto, Timo
Steinmetz, Helmuth
Kirkpatrick, Peter J
Derdeyn, Colin P
Beseoglu, Kerim
Bonafe, Alain
Mocco, J
Jabbour, Pascal
Kelly, Michael E
Korja, Miikka
Rabinstein, Alejandro A
Morita, Akio
Steiger, Hans-Jakob
Ronkainen, Antti
Lanzino, Giuseppe
Mori, Kentaro
Marotta, Thomas R
Pereira, Vitor Mendes
Kasuya, Hidetoshi
Dumont, Aaron S
Hankey, Graeme J
Spears, Julian
Molyneux, Andrew
Rüfenacht, Daniel
LeRoux, Peter
Seifert, Volker
Schaller, Karl
Brown, Robert D
Rinne, Jaakko
Fiorella, David J
Ogilvy, Christopher S
Rinkel, Gabriel J E
Mayer, Stephan A
Wermer, Marieke J H
Macdonald, R Loch
Knuckey, Neville
Abdulazim, Amr
Etminan, Nima
Vajkoczy, Peter
Torner, James C
Wanke, Isabel
Raabe, Andreas
Morgan, Michael K
Hänggi, Daniel
Zipfel, Gregory J
Bederson, Joshua
Lawton, Michael T
Nakayama, Naoki
Hasan, David M
Mee, Edward
Wong, George K C
Niemelä, Mika
Hoh, Brian L
Vergouwen, Mervyn D I
Barrow, Daniel L
Wong, John H
Connolly, E Sander
Gruber, Andreas
Rosenwasser, Robert H
Raymond, Jean
Juvela, Seppo
Solomon, Robert A
Nagahiro, Shinji
Pasqualin, Alberto
Pierot, Laurent
McDougall, Cameron
Amin-Hanjani, Sepideh
Al-Shahi Salman, Rustam
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Abstract

OBJECTIVE We endeavored to develop an unruptured intracranial aneurysm (UIA) treatment score (UIATS) model that includes and quantifies key factors involved in clinical decision-making in the management of UIAs and to assess agreement for this model among specialists in UIA management and research. METHODS An international multidisciplinary (neurosurgery, neuroradiology, neurology, clinical epidemiology) group of 69 specialists was convened to develop and validate the UIATS model using a Delphi consensus. For internal (39 panel members involved in identification of relevant features) and external validation (30 independent external reviewers), 30 selected UIA cases were used to analyze agreement with UIATS management recommendations based on a 5-point Likert scale (5 indicating strong agreement). Interrater agreement (IRA) was assessed with standardized coefficients of dispersion (vr*) (vr* = 0 indicating excellent agreement and vr* = 1 indicating poor agreement). RESULTS The UIATS accounts for 29 key factors in UIA management. Agreement with UIATS (mean Likert scores) was 4.2 (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.1-4.3) per reviewer for both reviewer cohorts; agreement per case was 4.3 (95% CI 4.1-4.4) for panel members and 4.5 (95% CI 4.3-4.6) for external reviewers (p = 0.017). Mean Likert scores were 4.2 (95% CI 4.1-4.3) for interventional reviewers (n = 56) and 4.1 (95% CI 3.9-4.4) for noninterventional reviewers (n = 12) (p = 0.290). Overall IRA (vr*) for both cohorts was 0.026 (95% CI 0.019-0.033). CONCLUSIONS This novel UIA decision guidance study captures an excellent consensus among highly informed individuals on UIA management, irrespective of their underlying specialty. Clinicians can use the UIATS as a comprehensive mechanism for indicating how a large group of specialists might manage an individual patient with a UIA.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........08272edaaace5de60bd1c0057c4c2ead