Pennington Zach, Ahmed A Karim, Cottrill Ethan, Westbroek Erick M, Goodwin Matthew L, Sciubba Daniel M
Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Ann Transl Med. 2019 May;7(10):218. doi: 10.21037/atm.2019.01.65.
Mechanical instability is one of the two main indications for surgical intervention in patients with metastatic spine disease. Since its publication in 2010, the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) has been the most commonly used means of assessing mechanical instability. To prove clinically valuable though, diagnostic tests must demonstrate consistency across measures and across observers. Here we report a systematic review and meta-analysis of all prior reports of intraobserver and interobserver reliability of the SINS score. To identify articles, we queried the PubMed, CINAHL, EMBASE, Cochrane, and Web of Science databases for all full-text English articles reporting interobserver or intraobserver reliability for the SINS score, category, or a domain of the SINS score. Articles reporting confidence intervals for these metrics were then subjected to meta-analysis to identify pooled estimates of reliability. Of 167 unique studies identified, seven met inclusion criteria and were subjected to qualitative review and meta-analysis. Intraobserver reliability for SINS score was found to be near perfect [estimate =0.815; 90% CI (0.661-0.969)] and interobserver reliability was substantial [0.673; (0.227-1.12)]. Intraobserver and interobserver reliability among spine surgeons was significantly better than reliability across all observers (both P<0.0001). Qualitative analysis suggested that increased surgeon experience may be associated with greater intraobserver and interobserver reliability among spine surgeons. On the whole, meta-analysis of the available literature suggests SINS to have good intraobserver and interobserver reliability, giving it the potential to be a valuable guide to the management of patients with spinal metastases. Further research is required to demonstrate that SINS score correlates with the clinical decision to stabilize.
机械性不稳定是转移性脊柱疾病患者手术干预的两个主要指征之一。自2010年发表以来,脊柱不稳定肿瘤评分(SINS)一直是评估机械性不稳定最常用的方法。然而,要证明其具有临床价值,诊断测试必须在不同测量方法和不同观察者之间具有一致性。在此,我们报告对所有先前关于SINS评分的观察者内和观察者间可靠性报告的系统评价和荟萃分析。为了识别文章,我们在PubMed、CINAHL、EMBASE、Cochrane和Web of Science数据库中查询了所有报告SINS评分、类别或SINS评分某一领域的观察者间或观察者内可靠性的英文全文文章。然后,对报告这些指标置信区间的文章进行荟萃分析,以确定可靠性的合并估计值。在识别出的167项独特研究中,有7项符合纳入标准,并进行了定性审查和荟萃分析。发现SINS评分的观察者内可靠性接近完美[估计值=0.815;90%可信区间(0.661 - 0.969)],观察者间可靠性较高[0.673;(0.227 - 1.12)]。脊柱外科医生之间的观察者内和观察者间可靠性明显优于所有观察者之间的可靠性(P均<0.0001)。定性分析表明,脊柱外科医生经验的增加可能与更高的观察者内和观察者间可靠性相关。总体而言,对现有文献的荟萃分析表明SINS具有良好的观察者内和观察者间可靠性,使其有可能成为脊柱转移瘤患者管理的有价值指南。需要进一步研究以证明SINS评分与稳定化的临床决策相关。