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Interobserver variance and patient heterogeneity influencing the treatment of grade I spondylolisthesis
Institution:1. Department of Neurosurgery, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI, USA;2. Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA;3. Department of Neurosurgery, Lahey Clinic, Boston, MA, USA;1. Combined Neurosurgery and Orthopaedic Spine Program, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada;2. Division of Orthopaedics, Department of Surgery, Orthopaedic Spine Program, London Health Science Centre, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada;3. Department of Surgery, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada;4. Hôpital de L''Enfant-Jésus, Laval University, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada;5. Departments of Surgery and Orthopedics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;6. Canada East Spine Center and Dalhousie University, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada;7. Departments of Surgery and Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada;8. Research Operations, Canadian Spine Society, 10 Armstrong Crescent, Markdale, Ontario, Canada;9. Orthopedics and Neurosurgery, Winnipeg Spine Program, University of Manitoba, Winning, Manitoba, Canada;10. Department of Surgery, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;11. Division of Neurosurgery, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada;12. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Saint John Regional Hospital, Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada;1. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Orthopaedic Implants, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People''s Hospital, Shanghai JiaoTong University School of Medicine, 639 Zhizaoju Road, Shanghai 200011, China.;2. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Changzheng Hospital, Second Military Medical University, 415 Fengyang Road, Shanghai 200003, China;1. Dr. Farrokhi Eris Research Institute, Tehran, Iran;2. Islamic Azad University, Najafabad, Iran;3. California State University Stanislaus, Turlock, CA, USA
Abstract:BACKGROUND CONTEXTDespite well done randomized clinical trials, the role of fusion as an adjunct to decompression for the treatment of patients with degenerative spondylolisthesis remains controversial. There is substantial variation in the use of fusion as well as the techniques used for fusion for a population of patients all described by a single ICD10 code.PURPOSEWe sought to investigate the source of the variation in the perceived role of fusion by looking at surgeon as well as patient-specific factors.STUDY DESIGNProspective cohort study examining the variability of recommendations from an expert panel of surgeons-based imaging and clinical vignettes.PATIENT SAMPLEPatients with degenerative spondylolisthesis and stenosis.OUTCOME MEASURESA six-category treatment schema based on level of invasiveness of proposed surgeries with one through three representing nonfusion strategies and categories four through six representing fusion strategies.METHODSThe authors are conducting the ongoing spinal laminectomy vs instrumented pedicle screw II study in which patients with grade one degenerative spondylolisthesis and stenosis are randomized to two groups: a review group in which patients are treated as per recommendations of an expert panel and a nonreview group in which patients are treated as per the referring surgeon's preference. In the former (review group), clinical vignettes and radiographic studies were evaluated by an expert panel of spine surgeons. The panel then provided these recommendations to the referring surgeon. We investigated the underlying variability by looking both at the number of similar or different recommendations received by an individual patient (surgeon-related variability) as well as the number of similar or different recommendations offered by individual surgeons across the population of patients (patient heterogeneity). Agreement between surgeons for fusion vs nonfusion (Categories 1–3 vs 4–6) was calculated using a Kappa value from a mixed effects logistic regression model. We looked at Kappa for agreement and weighted Kappa for association of ratings on the ordinal 1 to 6 scale with a mixed effects linear regression model. Additionally, we analyzed the summary of data between patients after averaging the rater scores within patients. Similarly, we summarized the data between surgeons after averaging their scores over the patients that each surgeon reviewed.RESULTSOne hundred and fourteen patients received 1,463 treatment recommendations. On average, fusion was recommended 58.5% of the time. Overall agreement was low, and perfect agreement on the need for fusion was seen in only 24 (21.1%) of patients. Kappa statistic for agreement on fusion was 0.378 (95% confidence interval 0.324–0.432). The average score across surgeons was 4.2 (0.6) with a range of 3 to 5.3. The most common single recommendation was for fusion with interbody fusion (40.8%) and the lowest was for decompression with noninstrumented fusion (0.5%).CONCLUSIONSWe demonstrated variability in surgical approach when individual patients were evaluated by a panel of surgeons indicating that even "expert" surgeons disagree with each other regarding the need for fusion in individual patients. We were also able to demonstrate that individual patients received consistent recommendations that were very different from those received by other individuals evaluated by the same surgeons. This indicates that there is patient-related heterogeneity driving variability independent of surgeon factors.
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