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Ottawa classification for symptomatic acetabular dysplasia assessment of interobserver and intraobserver reliability

Kamal Bali, Kevin Smit, Mazen M. Ibrahim, Stéphane Poitras, Geoffrey Wilkin, Romain Galmiche, Étienne L. Belzile, Paul E. Beaulé

2020Bone and Joint Research37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: The aim of the current study was to assess the reliability of the Ottawa classification for symptomatic acetabular dysplasia. METHODS: In all, 134 consecutive hips that underwent periacetabular osteotomy were categorized using a validated software (Hip2Norm) into four categories of normal, lateral/global, anterior, or posterior. A total of 74 cases were selected for reliability analysis, and these included 44 dysplastic and 30 normal hips. A group of six blinded fellowship-trained raters, provided with the classification system, looked at these radiographs at two separate timepoints to classify the hips using standard radiological measurements. Thereafter, a consensus meeting was held where a modified flow diagram was devised, before a third reading by four raters using a separate set of 74 radiographs took place. RESULTS: Intrarater results per surgeon between Time 1 and Time 2 showed substantial to almost perfect agreement among the raters (κappa = 0.416 to 0.873). With respect to inter-rater reliability, at Time 1 and Time 2 there was substantial agreement overall between all surgeons (Time 1 κappa = 0.619; Time 2 κappa = 0.623). Posterior and anterior rating categories had moderate and fair agreement at Time 1 (posterior κappa = 0.557; anterior κappa = 0.438) and Time 2 (posterior κappa = 0.506; anterior κappa = 0.250), respectively. At Time 3, overall reliability (κappa = 0.687) and posterior and anterior reliability (posterior κappa = 0.579; anterior κappa = 0.521) improved from Time 1 and Time 2. CONCLUSION: 2020;9(5):242-249.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRadiographyReliability (semiconductor)SurgeryDysplasiaOrthodonticsNuclear medicineInternal medicineQuantum mechanicsPower (physics)PhysicsHip disorders and treatmentsOrthopaedic implants and arthroplastyHeterotopic Ossification and Related Conditions