학술논문

Interrater Reliability of National Institutes of Health Traumatic Brain Injury Imaging Common Data Elements for Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Neurotrauma. 38(20)
Subject
Neurosciences
Brain Disorders
Traumatic Head and Spine Injury
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Clinical Research
Biomedical Imaging
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Neurological
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Artifacts
Biomarkers
Brain Concussion
Brain Contusion
Brain Injuries
Traumatic
Common Data Elements
Diffuse Axonal Injury
Female
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Observer Variation
Reproducibility of Results
United States
Young Adult
FDA Medical Device Development Tool
imaging
interrater reliability
MRI
radiology
TRACK-TBI Investigators
Clinical Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Language
Abstract
The National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NIH-NINDS) Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Imaging Common Data Elements (CDEs) are standardized definitions for pathological intracranial lesions based on their appearance on neuroimaging studies. The NIH-NINDS TBI Imaging CDEs were designed to be as consistent as possible with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) definition of biomarkers as "an indicator of normal biological processes, pathogenic processes, or biological responses to an exposure or intervention." However, the FDA qualification process for biomarkers requires proof of reliable biomarker test measurements. We determined the interrater reliability of TBI Imaging CDEs on subacute brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed on 517 mild TBI patients presenting to 11 U.S. level 1 trauma centers. Three U.S. board-certified neuroradiologists independently evaluated brain MRI performed 2 weeks post-injury for the following CDEs: traumatic axonal injury (TAI), diffuse axonal injury (DAI), and brain contusion. We found very high interrater agreement for brain contusion, with prevalence- and bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) values for pairs of readers from 0.92 [95% confidence interval, 0.88-0.95] to 0.94 [0.90-0.96]. We found intermediate agreement for TAI and DAI, with PABAK values of 0.74-0.78 [0.70-0.82]. The near-perfect agreement for subacute brain contusion is likely attributable to the high conspicuity and distinctive appearance of these lesions on T1-weighted images. Interrater agreement for TAI and DAI was lower, because signal void in small vascular structures, and artifactual foci of signal void, can be difficult to distinguish from the punctate round or linear areas of slight hemorrhage that are a common hallmark of TAI/DAI on MRI.