z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
EXCELLENT RELIABILITY OF SEMI-QUANTITATIVE NAILFOLD CAPILLAROSCOPY IN PATIENTS WITH SYSTEMIC SCLEROSIS – A PILOT STUDY
Author(s) -
Ana Maria Gheorghiu,
Bucharest Pharmacy,
Raida Oneaţă,
Mihai Bojincă,
Rucsandra Dobrotă,
Alina Soare,
Liviu Macovei,
Mihaela Milicescu,
M. Sasu,
Marilena Gorga,
Roxana Sfrenț-Cornățeanu,
Victor Stoica,
Carina Mihai
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
romanian journal of rheumatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2069-6086
pISSN - 1843-0791
DOI - 10.37897/rjr.2016.4.4
Subject(s) - intraclass correlation , kappa , medicine , reliability (semiconductor) , inter rater reliability , cohen's kappa , cohort , quantitative assessment , physical therapy , statistics , psychometrics , mathematics , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics , clinical psychology , rating scale , geometry , risk analysis (engineering)
Background. Semi-quantitative nailfold capillaroscopy (NFC) scoring represents a promising tool for assessing disease activity, severity and change in systemic sclerosis (SSc), however there is no consensus yet over which capillaroscopy abnormalities should be analyzed and how. Objective. Investigation of the reliability of the qualitative and semi-quantitative scoring of NFC assessment between two raters and test-retest for each rater in a SSc cohort. Methods. This is a single-center pilot study where 2 raters assessed the NFC images of 48 consecutive patients with SSc. Data were analyzed in 3 ways: 1. qualitatively by “normal”/“abnormal” category; 2. qualitatively by the following categories: “early”, “active”, “late” SSc patterns, “normal”, and unclassifiable in any pattern, and step; 3. Semi-quantitatively by calculating the mean score for capillary loss, disorganization of the microvascular array, giant capillaries, microhaemorrhages and capillary ramifications and combinations of giant capillaries and microhaemorrhages (as a surrogate for vascular activity). Disorganization and ramifications (surrogate for vascular damage) were also assessed. Variables for all steps were calculated for all fingers and for each finger. Inter-rater/intra-rater agreement was assessed by Cohen’s kappa coefficients for qualitative variables and by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) for mean score values of abnormalities. Results. Inter-rater reliability ranged from good to excellent agreement for mean score values of abnormalities in all fingers (ICC coefficients 0.745 to 0.897) and was excellent for activity (ICC coefficient of 0.923) and damage combinations (ICC coefficient of 0.918). Assessment of abnormalities in a qualitative manner (normal/abnormal or with capillaroscopy patterns) showed weaker inter-rater agreement than the semi-quantitative assessment (k coefficient <0.7). Intra-rater variability was good to excellent for mean score values of abnormalities and activity and damage combinations in all fingers and separate fingers for both raters; for qualitative assessment, only one of the raters had good test-retest reliability. Conclusion. Reliability of NFC assessment is essential in SSc trials/clinical practice to ensure quality of data. This pilot study demonstrates very good reliability between raters of the semi-quantitative NFC assessment in a SSc cohort. Combinations of NFC abnormalities had very good reliability and might be preferred because they are less time consuming.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here