Karamian, Brian A. and Schroeder, Gregory D. and Lambrechts, Mark J. and Canseco, Jose A. and Vialle, Emiliano N. and Rajasekaran, Shanmuganathan and Benneker, Lorin M. and Dvorak, Marcel R. and Kandziora, Frank and Oner, Cumhur and Schnake, Klaus and Kepler, Christopher K. and Vaccaro, Alexander R. (2023) The Influence of Regional Differences on the Reliability of the AO Spine Sacral Injury Classification System. Global Spine Journal, 13 (7). pp. 2025-2032. ISSN 2192-5682
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Abstract
Study Design
Global cross-sectional survey.
Objective
To explore the influence of geographic region on the AO Spine Sacral Classification System.
Methods
A total of 158 AO Spine and AO Trauma members from 6 AO world regions (Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin and South America, Middle East, and North America) participated in a live webinar to assess the reliability, reproducibility, and accuracy of classifying sacral fractures using the AO Spine Sacral Classification System. This evaluation was performed with 26 cases presented in randomized order on 2 occasions 3 weeks apart.
Results
A total of 8320 case assessments were performed. All regions demonstrated excellent intraobserver reproducibility for fracture morphology. Respondents from Europe (k = .80) and North America (k = .86) achieved excellent reproducibility for fracture subtype while respondents from all other regions displayed substantial reproducibility. All regions demonstrated at minimum substantial interobserver reliability for fracture morphology and subtype. Each region demonstrated >90% accuracy in classifying fracture morphology and >80% accuracy in fracture subtype compared to the gold standard. Type C morphology (p 2 = .0000) and A3 (p 1 = .0280), B2 (p 1 = .0015), C0 (p 1 = .0085), and C2 (p 1 =.0016, p 2 =.0000) subtypes showed significant regional disparity in classification accuracy (p 1 = Assessment 1, p 2 = Assessment 2). Respondents from Asia (except in A3) and the combined group of North, Latin, and South America had accuracy percentages below the combined mean, whereas respondents from Europe consistently scored above the mean.
Conclusions
In a global validation study of the AO Spine Sacral Classification System, substantial reliability of both fracture morphology and subtype classification was found across all geographic regions.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | AO Spine Spine Surgery Classification System |
Divisions: | Orthopaedic Surgery |
Depositing User: | Mr Repository Admin |
Date Deposited: | 16 Oct 2023 10:29 |
Last Modified: | 27 Jun 2024 04:34 |
URI: | https://ir.orthopaedicresearchgroup.com/id/eprint/77 |