Shomorony Andre, Weitzman Rachel, Chen Hannah, Sclafani Anthony P
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Am J Otolaryngol. 2024 Jan-Feb;45(1):104088. doi: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2023.104088. Epub 2023 Oct 5.
To determine if an endoscopic otologic and rhinologic examination performed by a patient and interpreted remotely by an otolaryngologist is non-inferior to in-person examination, and to assess the feasibility of this system for telemedical visits.
Twenty healthy subjects performed a self-examination of their ears and nose using a commercially available endoscope under remote guidance by an otolaryngology provider over Zoom. This same provider and another otolaryngologist also performed separate, in-person examinations of each subject and rated their findings. Finally, both providers blindly reviewed a video recording of each virtual exam four weeks later and rated their findings. Subjects were surveyed about their experience. Interrater reliability was calculated using Cohen's kappa coefficients and the ability to detect different anatomic structures and features by in-person vs. virtual examination was compared using Wilcoxon tests and Chi-squared proportion tests.
The subjects' average age was 30 (SD 11.5) years. Interrater reliability was excellent; kappa coefficients were 0.72 and 0.81 (p < 0.001) for virtual and in-person exams, respectively. Of the 3 anatomic structures within the ear exam, none showed a difference in detectability between virtual and in-person exams. Of the 12 structures in the nasal exam, 3 were better visualized in-person and 9 showed no difference. Subject satisfaction was excellent; the average likelihood of recommending this virtual technology to peers (1-10) was 8.65 (SD 1.4).
Patient self-examination of the ears and nose using a portable endoscope may be an effective strategy for obtaining valuable data during telemedical otolaryngology visits.
确定患者自行进行的耳科和鼻科内镜检查并由耳鼻喉科医生远程解读是否不劣于亲自检查,并评估该系统用于远程医疗问诊的可行性。
20名健康受试者在耳鼻喉科医生通过Zoom进行远程指导下,使用市售内窥镜对自己的耳朵和鼻子进行自我检查。同一位医生和另一位耳鼻喉科医生还分别对每个受试者进行了亲自检查并对检查结果进行评分。最后,两位医生在四周后盲目查看了每个虚拟检查的视频记录并对结果进行评分。对受试者的体验进行了调查。使用Cohen's kappa系数计算评分者间信度,并使用Wilcoxon检验和卡方比例检验比较亲自检查与虚拟检查检测不同解剖结构和特征的能力。
受试者的平均年龄为30岁(标准差11.5)。评分者间信度极佳;虚拟检查和亲自检查的kappa系数分别为0.72和0.81(p < 0.001)。在耳部检查的3个解剖结构中,虚拟检查和亲自检查在可检测性上没有差异。在鼻部检查的12个结构中,3个结构在亲自检查时可视化效果更好,9个结构没有差异。受试者满意度很高;向同龄人推荐这种虚拟技术的平均可能性(1 - 10分)为8.65(标准差1.4)。
使用便携式内窥镜进行患者耳部和鼻部的自我检查可能是在远程医疗耳鼻喉科问诊期间获取有价值数据的有效策略。