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Inter-rater agreement between humans and computer in quantitative assessment of computed tomography after cardiac arrest

Martin Kenda, Cheng Zhuo, Christopher Guettler, Christian Storm, Christoph J. Ploner, Christoph Leithner, Michael Scheel

2022Frontiers in Neurology20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: the manual measurement of radiodensity in different brain regions. Recently, automated analysis methods have been introduced. There is limited data on the Inter-rater agreement of both methods. Methods: Three blinded human raters (neuroradiologist, neurologist, student) with different levels of clinical experience retrospectively assessed the Gray-White-Matter Ratio (GWR) in head CTs of 95 CA patients. GWR was also quantified by a recently published computer algorithm that uses coregistration with standardized brain spaces to identify regions of interest (ROIs). We calculated intraclass correlation (ICC) for inter-rater agreement between human and computer raters as well as area under the curve (AUC) and sensitivity/specificity for poor outcome prognostication. Results: Inter-rater agreement on GWR was very good (ICC 0.82-0.84) between all three human raters across different levels of expertise and between the computer algorithm and neuroradiologist (ICC 0.83; 95% CI 0.78-0.88). Despite high overall agreement, we observed considerable, clinically relevant deviations of GWR measurements (up to 0.24) in individual patients. In our cohort, at a GWR threshold of 1.10, this did not lead to any false poor neurological outcome prediction. Conclusion: Human and computer raters demonstrated high overall agreement in GWR determination in head CTs after CA. The clinically relevant deviations of GWR measurement in individual patients underscore the necessity of additional qualitative evaluation and integration of head CT findings into a multimodal approach to prognostication of neurological outcome after CA.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroradiologistIntraclass correlationMedicineNeuroradiologyNuclear medicineRadiologyMagnetic resonance imagingNeurologyPsychometricsPsychiatryClinical psychologyCardiac Arrest and ResuscitationCardiac Imaging and DiagnosticsRadiation Dose and Imaging