Back to Search Start Over

Regional variability in use of a novel assessment of thoracolumbar spine fractures: United States versus international surgeons.

Authors :
Ratliff, John
Anand, Neel
Vaccaro, Alexander R
Lim, Moe R
Lee, Joon Y
Arnold, Paul
Harrop, James
Rampersaud, Raja
Bono, Christopher M
Gahr, Ralf H
Ratliff, John
Anand, Neel
Vaccaro, Alexander R
Lim, Moe R
Lee, Joon Y
Arnold, Paul
Harrop, James
Rampersaud, Raja
Bono, Christopher M
Gahr, Ralf H
Source :
Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Considerable variability exists in clinical approaches to thoracolumbar fractures. Controversy in evaluation and nomenclature contribute to this confusion, with significant differences found between physicians, between different specialties, and in different geographic regions. A new classification system for thoracolumbar injuries, the Thoracolumbar Injury Severity Score (TLISS), was recently described by Vaccaro. No assessment of regional differences has been described. We report regional variability in use of the TLISS system between United States and non-US surgeons. METHODS: Twenty-eight spine surgeons (8 neurosurgeons and 20 orthopedic surgeons) reviewed 56 clinical thoracolumbar injury case histories, which included pertinent imaging studies. Cases were classified and scored using the TLISS system. After a three month period, the case histories were re-ordered and the physicians repeated the exercise; 22 physicians completed both surveys and were used to assess intra-rater reliability. The reliability and treatment validity of the TLISS was assessed. Surgeons were grouped into US (n = 15) and non-US (n = 13) cohorts. Inter-rater (both within and between different geographic groups) and intra-rater reliability was assessed by percent agreement, Cohen's kappa, kappa with linear weighting, and Spearman's rank-order correlation. CONCLUSION: Non-US surgeons were found to have greater inter-rater reliability in injury mechanism, while agreement on neurological status and posterior ligamentous complex integrity tended to be higher among US surgeons. Inter-rater agreement on management was moderate, although it tended to be higher in US-surgeons. Inter-rater agreement between US and non-US surgeons was similar to within group inter-rater agreement for all categories. While intra-rater agreement for mechanism tended to be higher among US surgeons, intra-rater reliability for neurological status and PLC was slightly higher among non-US surgeons. Intra-rater

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Department of Neurosurgery Faculty Papers
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1228054522
Document Type :
Electronic Resource