Grotta J C, Chiu D, Lu M, Patel S, Levine S R, Tilley B C, Brott T G, Haley E C, Lyden P D, Kothari R, Frankel M, Lewandowski C A, Libman R, Kwiatkowski T, Broderick J P, Marler J R, Corrigan J, Huff S, Mitsias P, Talati S, Tanne D
Department of Neurology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, Texas, USA.
Stroke. 1999 Aug;30(8):1528-33. doi: 10.1161/01.str.30.8.1528.
Ischemic changes identified on CT scans performed in the first few hours after stroke onset, which are thought to possibly represent early cytotoxic edema and development of irreversible injury, may have important implications for subsequent treatment. However, insecurity and conflicting data exist over the ability of clinicians to correctly recognize and interpret these changes. We performed a detailed review of selected baseline CT scans from the NINDS rt-PA Stroke Trial to test agreement among experienced stroke specialists and other physicians on the presence of early CT ischemic changes.
Seventy baseline CT scans from the NINDS Stroke Trial were read and classified for the presence or absence of various early findings of ischemia by 16 individuals, including NINDS trial investigators, other neurologists, other emergency medicine physicians, and radiology or stroke fellows. CT scans included normal scans and scans from patients who later developed symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, as well as scans on which the NINDS rt-PA Stroke Trial neuroradiologist identified clear-cut early CT changes. For each CT finding, kappa-statistics were used to assess the proportion of agreement beyond chance.
kappa-Values (95% confidence interval [CI]) ranged from 0.20 (-0.20, 0.61) (fair agreement) to 0.41 (0.37, 0.45) (moderate agreement) among the 16 viewers, and the kappa-value was only 0.39 (0.29, 0.49) (fair) in answer to the question "do early CT changes involve more than one third of the MCA [middle cerebral artery] territory?" There was substantial variability within each specialty group and between groups. kappa-Values were only fair to moderate even among physicians experienced in selecting and treating acute stroke patients with rtPA. Observed agreement ranged from 68% to 85%. Physicians agreed on the finding of early CT changes involving >33% of the MCA territory 77% of the time, although the kappa-value of 0.39 suggested only moderate agreement beyond chance.
There is considerable lack of agreement, even among experienced clinicians, in recognizing and quantifying early CT changes. Improved methods of recognizing and quantifying early ischemic brain damage are needed.
在卒中发作后的最初几个小时内进行的CT扫描中发现的缺血性改变,被认为可能代表早期细胞毒性水肿和不可逆损伤的发展,这可能对后续治疗具有重要意义。然而,临床医生正确识别和解释这些改变的能力存在不确定性且数据相互矛盾。我们对美国国立神经疾病与卒中研究所(NINDS)rt-PA卒中试验中选定的基线CT扫描进行了详细回顾,以测试经验丰富的卒中专家和其他医生在早期CT缺血性改变的存在方面的一致性。
16名人员(包括NINDS试验研究人员、其他神经科医生、其他急诊医学医生以及放射科或卒中研究员)对NINDS卒中试验中的70份基线CT扫描进行了阅读,并根据是否存在各种早期缺血性发现进行了分类。CT扫描包括正常扫描以及后来发生症状性颅内出血的患者的扫描,以及NINDS rt-PA卒中试验神经放射科医生确定有明确早期CT改变的扫描。对于每个CT发现,使用kappa统计量来评估超出偶然因素的一致比例。
16名观察者之间的kappa值(95%置信区间[CI])范围从0.20(-0.20,0.61)(一般一致性)到0.41(0.37,0.45)(中等一致性),对于问题“早期CT改变是否累及超过三分之一的大脑中动脉[MCA]区域?”,kappa值仅为0.39(0.29,0.49)(一般)。每个专业组内部以及不同组之间存在很大差异。即使在有选择和治疗急性卒中患者rtPA经验的医生中,kappa值也仅为一般到中等。观察到的一致性范围从68%到85%。医生们在77%的情况下对早期CT改变累及超过33%的MCA区域这一发现达成了一致,尽管kappa值为0.39表明超出偶然因素的一致性仅为中等。
即使在经验丰富的临床医生中,在识别和量化早期CT改变方面也存在相当大的不一致。需要改进识别和量化早期缺血性脑损伤的方法。