Published 2018
| Version v1
Publication
Post-operative radiograph assessment of children undergoing closed reduction and spica cast immobilization for developmental dysplasia of the hip: does experience matter?
Creators
Contributors
Description
Purpose: Closed reduction and spica cast immobilization are routinely used
for young patients with developmental dysplasia of the hip with reducible hips.
Our primary objective was to assess the interpretation quality of immediate
post-operative pelvis radiographs after treatment.
Methods: A series of 28 randomly selected patients (30 hips) with pre- and
post-operative pelvis radiographs and post-operative magnetic resonance
imaging were included. Each was presented twice with an interval of 2 weeks,
in alternating orders. Raters with different experience and specialties from
different institutions rated the quality of reduction (hip in or out) after
treatment.
Results: Thirteen surgeons and 3 radiologists evaluated 30 hips (28 patients).
Agreement was not satisfactory (κ = 0.12). Experienced clinicians demonstrated
similar agreement to inexperienced raters (κ = 0.04). Consistency at a 2-week
interval was moderate (κ = 0.48, percent of agreement at 82%). The mean
number of errors from the two ratings were 8.6 ± 2.5 and 8.9 ± 2.7, respectively
(P = 0.72). There was no significant difference between surgeons with different
levels of experience; radiologists did better than surgeons, but the difference
was insignificant. Raters from different institutions had similar performance in
poor judgment.
Conclusions: Our results show poor concordance between observers and
ratings. Post-operative radiographs are unreliable for assessing the quality of
hip reduction. The level of experience, subspecialty, and geographical origin
do not impact the radiographic assessment. Based on the present findings, we
recommend performing post-operative magnetic resonance imaging rather than
anteroposterior pelvis radiograph to assess the hip. Compared to standard
radiographs, magnetic resonance imaging allows more reliable interpretation
while decreasing radiation exposure.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1188295
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1188295
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE