Hophing Lauren, Tse Tiffany, Naimer Nicole, Masellis Mario, Mirza Saira S, Izenberg Aaron, Khosravani Houman, Kassardjian Charles D, Mitchell Sara B
Division of Neurology (LH, MM, AI, HK, CDK, SBM), Department of Medicine; Neurology Quality and Innovation Lab (LH, TT, NN, HK, CDK, SBM); Division of Neurology (MM, AI, HK, SBM), Department of Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre; Sunnybrook Research Institute (MM, SSM, HK, SBM), University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Division of Neurology (CDK), Department of Medicine; Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute (CDK), St. Michael's Hospital; Department of Psychiatry (SBM), Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Azrieli Brian Medicine Fellowship Program (SBM), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2024 Dec;14(6):e200339. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200339. Epub 2024 Aug 16.
The COVID-19 pandemic forced a shift to virtual care in several neurologic care settings. Little is known about the validity of the virtual neurologic examination (VNE) for clinical decision making when compared with the in-person neurologic examination (IPNE). The objective of this study was to investigate the utility of the VNE in arriving at an accurate localization and diagnosis in comparison with the traditional IPNE in an ambulatory outpatient setting.
A retrospective chart review of patients examined virtually and in-person within 4 months at outpatient general neurology and neuromuscular clinics from 2 tertiary academic care centers during the COVID-19 pandemic was conducted. The Cohen kappa coefficient was calculated to test agreement between virtual and in-person assessment results, and descriptive statistical methods were used to compare accuracy, localization, and diagnosis.
A total of 81 patients met the inclusion criteria. Overall, there was fair agreement between VNE and IPNE (64% agreement, = 0.003). Substantial agreement between VNE and IPNE was observed for gait abnormalities; moderate agreement for extraocular movements, facial weakness, dysarthria, fasciculation, and lower limb weakness; and fair agreement for bulk, upper limb weakness, and sensation. No agreement between VNE and IPNE was seen for hypokinetic or hyperkinetic movements and cerebellar signs. Compared with the IPNE, specificity of the VNE was 86% and sensitivity was 56%. Some cases demonstrated a consistent localization (44%) and diagnosis (57%) after virtual and in-person assessments. The localization was changed in 15% and refined in 41% of cases between visits. The diagnosis was changed in 14% and refined in 30% of cases.
The high rates of agreement in detecting an abnormality on the VNE and IPNE for some maneuvers and resultant clinical impressions may support the validity of the VNE for initial consultation depending on the clinical scenario. The VNE seems to be a good surrogate evaluation compared with the IPNE for certain chief complaints. The low sensitivity suggests that a normal VNE should warrant further in-person clinical correlation, especially in the context of a highly concerning history. The IPNE is more sensitive in detecting subtle abnormalities on examination, and a low threshold should be used to bring a patient in for an IPNE if the VNE is normal in certain clinical contexts.
新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)大流行迫使多个神经科护理环境转向虚拟护理。与面对面神经检查(IPNE)相比,虚拟神经检查(VNE)用于临床决策的有效性知之甚少。本研究的目的是在门诊环境中,与传统的IPNE相比,研究VNE在准确定位和诊断方面的效用。
对2家三级学术护理中心在COVID-19大流行期间门诊普通神经科和神经肌肉诊所4个月内接受虚拟检查和面对面检查的患者进行回顾性病历审查。计算Cohen卡方系数以检验虚拟评估和面对面评估结果之间的一致性,并使用描述性统计方法比较准确性、定位和诊断。
共有81例患者符合纳入标准。总体而言,VNE和IPNE之间有适度一致性(一致性为64%,κ = 0.003)。VNE和IPNE在步态异常方面观察到高度一致性;在眼球运动、面部无力、构音障碍、肌束震颤和下肢无力方面为中度一致性;在肌肉量、上肢无力和感觉方面为适度一致性。VNE和IPNE在运动减少或运动增多以及小脑体征方面未观察到一致性。与IPNE相比,VNE的特异性为86%,敏感性为56%。一些病例在虚拟评估和面对面评估后显示出一致的定位(44%)和诊断(57%)。两次就诊之间,15%的病例定位发生改变,41%的病例定位得到细化。14%的病例诊断发生改变,30%的病例诊断得到细化。
VNE和IPNE在某些操作中检测异常及由此产生的临床印象方面的高一致性,可能支持根据临床情况VNE用于初步会诊的有效性。与IPNE相比,对于某些主要症状,VNE似乎是一种良好的替代评估方法。低敏感性表明正常的VNE应进行进一步的面对面临床关联,特别是在病史高度可疑的情况下。IPNE在检查中检测细微异常方面更敏感,如果在某些临床情况下VNE正常,应采用低阈值让患者接受IPNE检查。