Effect of surgical experience and spine subspecialty on the reliability of the AO Spine Upper Cervical Injury Classification System.

Lambrechts, Mark J; Schroeder, Gregory D; Karamian, Brian A; Canseco, Jose A; Oner, F Cumhur; Benneker, Lorin M; Bransford, Richard J; Kandziora, Frank; Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan; El-Sharkawi, Mohammad; Kanna, Rishi; Joaquim, Andrei Fernandes; Schnake, Klaus; Kepler, Christopher K; Vaccaro, Alexander R (2023). Effect of surgical experience and spine subspecialty on the reliability of the AO Spine Upper Cervical Injury Classification System. Journal of neurosurgery - spine, 38(1), pp. 31-41. American Association of Neurological Surgeons 10.3171/2022.6.SPINE22454

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OBJECTIVE

The objective of this paper was to determine the interobserver reliability and intraobserver reproducibility of the AO Spine Upper Cervical Injury Classification System based on surgeon experience (< 5 years, 5-10 years, 10-20 years, and > 20 years) and surgical subspecialty (orthopedic spine surgery, neurosurgery, and "other" surgery).

METHODS

A total of 11,601 assessments of upper cervical spine injuries were evaluated based on the AO Spine Upper Cervical Injury Classification System. Reliability and reproducibility scores were obtained twice, with a 3-week time interval. Descriptive statistics were utilized to examine the percentage of accurately classified injuries, and Pearson's chi-square or Fisher's exact test was used to screen for potentially relevant differences between study participants. Kappa coefficients (κ) determined the interobserver reliability and intraobserver reproducibility.

RESULTS

The intraobserver reproducibility was substantial for surgeon experience level (< 5 years: 0.74 vs 5-10 years: 0.69 vs 10-20 years: 0.69 vs > 20 years: 0.70) and surgical subspecialty (orthopedic spine: 0.71 vs neurosurgery: 0.69 vs other: 0.68). Furthermore, the interobserver reliability was substantial for all surgical experience groups on assessment 1 (< 5 years: 0.67 vs 5-10 years: 0.62 vs 10-20 years: 0.61 vs > 20 years: 0.62), and only surgeons with > 20 years of experience did not have substantial reliability on assessment 2 (< 5 years: 0.62 vs 5-10 years: 0.61 vs 10-20 years: 0.61 vs > 20 years: 0.59). Orthopedic spine surgeons and neurosurgeons had substantial intraobserver reproducibility on both assessment 1 (0.64 vs 0.63) and assessment 2 (0.62 vs 0.63), while other surgeons had moderate reliability on assessment 1 (0.43) and fair reliability on assessment 2 (0.36).

CONCLUSIONS

The international reliability and reproducibility scores for the AO Spine Upper Cervical Injury Classification System demonstrated substantial intraobserver reproducibility and interobserver reliability regardless of surgical experience and spine subspecialty. These results support the global application of this classification system.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Orthopaedic, Plastic and Hand Surgery (DOPH) > Clinic of Orthopaedic Surgery

UniBE Contributor:

Benneker, Lorin Michael

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1547-5654

Publisher:

American Association of Neurological Surgeons

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

31 Aug 2022 14:58

Last Modified:

03 Jan 2023 00:12

Publisher DOI:

10.3171/2022.6.SPINE22454

PubMed ID:

35986731

Uncontrolled Keywords:

AO Spine neurosurgeon orthopedic spine surgeon reliability reproducibility trauma upper cervical spine

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/172285

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/172285

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