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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 10, 671-675, Copyright © 1996 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
S Chocron, JP Etievent, A Dussaucy, JF Viel, F Clement, K Alwan, M Neidhardt and N Schipman
The interpretation of coronary angiograms is indispensable in determining
procedure in coronary surgery. The aim of this study was to measure the
overall reliability of a group of surgeons in the interpretation of
coronary angiograms, surgical procedure and the evaluation of operative
risk. Ten coronary angiograms were interpreted by eight cardiac surgeons at
four different medical centers. Evaluation of coding discrepancies, in this
case of multiple raters applying an ordinal-scale classification scheme (0,
1, 2) with no expert yardstick available for coding, was explored by a
two-way random factor analysis of variance. Reliability was substantial for
the assessment of stenosis irrespective of the artery (intraclass
correlation coefficient (ICC) ranging from 0.92 to 1), and good for the
distal part of the artery (ICC ranging from 0.83 to 0.86) as well as for
the collateral provision (ICC ranging from 0.75 to 0.94). Agreement between
surgeons was good with respect to the number of bypasses to be performed
(ICC = 0.88). The number of bypass per patient varied from 2.6 to 3.2
depending on the surgeon. Agreement as to whether or not to bypass was
substantial for the right coronary artery (ICC = 0.92), good for the
marginal artery (ICC = 0.87) and fair for the left anterior descending
artery (ICC = 0.60) and the circumflex artery (ICC = 0.60). There was a
higher rate of agreement concerning inferior wall motion (ICC = 0.98) than
of the anterior wall motion (ICC = 0.78). Agreement was substantial for
ejection fraction (ICC = 0.93), operative risk (ICC = 0.93) and the type of
coronary tree (ICC = 0.85). With respect to the overall set of items, no
one surgeon disagreed significantly with the rest of the group. Some
disagreement regarding anatomy suitable for revascularization exists
between surgeons. Surgical assessment of risk is similar. Cardiac surgeons
quickly learn to assess risk in a similar manner, even though they might
not always graft the same anatomic vessels or assess regional wall motion
similarly.
ARTICLES
Inter-observer reliability in the interpretation of coronary angiograms
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Hopital Saint- Jacques, Besancon, France.
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