Department of Endodontics, Center for Advanced Dental Education, Saint Louis University, St Louis, Missouri.
Department of Endodontics, Center for Advanced Dental Education, Saint Louis University, St Louis, Missouri.
J Endod. 2021 Feb;47(2):291-296. doi: 10.1016/j.joen.2020.11.001. Epub 2020 Nov 10.
Several studies in radiology and medicine have evaluated the satisfaction of search (SOS) error effect in chest radiography, abdominal radiography, osteoradiology, and patients with multiple trauma. No research to date has been published evaluating the possible existence of the SOS error phenomenon made during dental periapical radiograph interpretations. The purpose of the present pilot study was to determine if an SOS error effect exists when dental clinicians interpret periapical radiographs. The null hypothesis was that the detection accuracy will be the same or will improve for the detection of native lesions in the presence of an added abnormality. The alternative hypothesis is that there will be a decrease in detection accuracy for native lesions in the presence of an added abnormality.
Six images were selected to be part of the present experiment. One of the 6 images served as the positive control, and another image served as the negative control. Four images, each including a single subtle carious lesion, were selected to represent the experimental images. The single subtle carious lesion present within the 4 experimental radiographs served as the native pathology, and an abnormality such as a periapical radiolucency, resorption, inadequate nonideal root canal obturation material, or recurrent carious lesion was artificially inserted into the image as the added pathology. Thus, the second set of images consisted of the same 4 images containing the native pathology including an added pathology that was inserted into the image using Adobe Photoshop CS6 (Adobe, Inc, San Jose, CA). Purposive sampling was obtained from 16 examiners including residents from endodontics and periodontics as well as alumni and faculty from the Saint Louis University Center for Advanced Dental Education, St Louis, MO. Each observer participated as a subject during 2 time-separated sessions. Each session was separated by a minimum period of 3 months' duration in order to prevent memory bias. Before starting each interpretation session, the participants were given verbal instructions. Subjects were instructed to provide a location (by tooth number), identify, and rate the presence of all suspected pathology using a Likert scale of 1-5 (1: definitely normal, 2: probably normal, 3: possibly abnormal, 4: probably abnormal, and 5: definitely abnormal). In the second session, the radiographs that were initially presented containing only the native lesion were presented again with the added abnormality, and vice versa. The observers' reports and confidence ratings were recorded and analyzed. Ratings of 3-5 were considered as being positive for the presence of pathology.
A true SOS error occurs when the presence of the native lesion is reported correctly without an added abnormality but is not reported (missed) in the presence of an added abnormality. In our study, a true SOS error occurred in 13 of the 64 interpretation sets (20.31%). There was a total of 64 expected native lesions present within the 4 native images viewed by 16 observers. In the 4 added images, there was a total of 64 expected added findings. In the images containing only native lesions, the observers reported 30 of the 64 expected native lesions. In the images containing an artificially added abnormality, the observers reported 58 of the 64 expected added abnormalities and 25 of the 64 expected native lesions. Observers reported fewer native lesions in the presence of an added abnormality.
The current investigation demonstrated the existence of the SOS effect during periapical radiographic interpretations. In 20.31% of interpretations, a true SOS error occurred. This study is clinically relevant because it can help clinicians in reducing false-negative errors made during radiographic interpretation, thus preventing misdiagnosis.
放射学和医学领域的几项研究已经评估了胸部 X 光、腹部 X 光、骨放射学和多发创伤患者的搜索满意度 (SOS) 错误效应。迄今为止,尚无研究发表评估在牙周根尖放射照片解释过程中可能存在的 SOS 错误现象。本初步研究的目的是确定当牙科临床医生解释牙周根尖放射照片时是否存在 SOS 错误现象。零假设是,在存在附加异常的情况下,检测到原生病变的检测准确性将相同或提高。替代假设是,在存在附加异常的情况下,原生病变的检测准确性会降低。
选择了 6 张图像作为本实验的一部分。其中一张 6 图像作为阳性对照,另一张图像作为阴性对照。选择了四张图像,每张图像都包含一个单一的细微龋损,以代表实验图像。在 4 张实验放射照片中存在的单个细微龋损代表原生病理学,并且在图像中人为插入异常,如根尖透光区、吸收、非理想根管填充材料不足或再发性龋损作为附加病理学。因此,第二组图像由相同的四张图像组成,包括包含附加病理学的原生病理学,该病理学是使用 Adobe Photoshop CS6(Adobe,Inc.,加利福尼亚州圣何塞)插入图像的。通过目的性抽样获得了包括牙髓学和牙周病学的居民以及来自圣路易斯大学高级牙科教育中心的校友和教职员工在内的 16 名检查者。每位观察者在两次时间分隔的会议中都作为受试者参与。每次会议之间至少间隔 3 个月的时间,以防止记忆偏差。在开始每次解释会议之前,参与者都会收到口头说明。要求参与者通过牙号提供位置,使用 1-5 的李克特量表(1:绝对正常,2:可能正常,3:可能异常,4:可能异常,5:绝对异常)识别并评估所有可疑病理。在第二阶段,最初仅呈现原生病变的放射照片再次呈现添加的异常,反之亦然。记录和分析观察者的报告和置信度评级。评分 3-5 被认为存在病理学阳性。
当存在原生病变时,正确报告不存在附加异常,但在存在附加异常时未报告(漏报)时,会发生真正的 SOS 错误。在我们的研究中,在 16 名观察者观察的 64 组解释中有 13 组(20.31%)发生了真正的 SOS 错误。在 4 张原生图像中总共存在 64 个预期的原生病变。在 4 张添加图像中,总共存在 64 个预期的添加发现。在仅包含原生病变的图像中,观察者报告了 64 个预期原生病变中的 30 个。在包含人工添加异常的图像中,观察者报告了 64 个预期添加异常中的 58 个和 64 个预期原生病变中的 25 个。观察者在存在附加异常的情况下报告了较少的原生病变。
目前的研究表明,在牙周根尖放射照片解释过程中存在 SOS 效应。在 20.31%的解释中,发生了真正的 SOS 错误。这项研究具有临床相关性,因为它可以帮助临床医生减少放射照片解释过程中的假阴性错误,从而防止误诊。