4.6 Article

Inter-Rater Variability in the Evaluation of Lung Ultrasound in Videos Acquired from COVID-19 Patients

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app13031321

Keywords

coronavirus disease 2019; inter-observer agreement; inter-rater reliability; lung ultrasound; point-of-care ultrasound; reliability; severe acute respiratory syndrome; ultrasound

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This study aimed to investigate the inter-rater reliability (IRR) and performance of lung ultrasound (LUS) in detecting COVID-19 related signs in longitudinal or transverse orientation. Thirty-three physicians with advanced LUS experience independently evaluated ultrasound videos of 20 confirmed COVID-19 patients. The results showed substantial IRR for normal LUS, but only fair IRR for individual B-lines. No statistically significant differences were found between longitudinal and transverse scans. Standardized clinical protocols may improve the IRR of LUS in COVID-19 patients.
Lung ultrasound (LUS) allows for the detection of a series of manifestations of COVID-19, such as B-lines and consolidations. The objective of this work was to study the inter-rater reliability (IRR) when detecting signs associated with COVID-19 in the LUS, as well as the performance of the test in a longitudinal or transverse orientation. Thirty-three physicians with advanced experience in LUS independently evaluated ultrasound videos previously acquired using the ULTRACOV system on 20 patients with confirmed COVID-19. For each patient, 24 videos of 3 s were acquired (using 12 positions with the probe in longitudinal and transverse orientations). The physicians had no information about the patients or other previous evaluations. The score assigned to each acquisition followed the convention applied in previous studies. A substantial IRR was found in the cases of normal LUS (kappa = 0.74), with only a fair IRR for the presence of individual B-lines (kappa = 0.36) and for confluent B-lines occupying < 50% (kappa = 0.26) and a moderate IRR in consolidations and B-lines > 50% (kappa = 0.50). No statistically significant differences between the longitudinal and transverse scans were found. The IRR for LUS of COVID-19 patients may benefit from more standardized clinical protocols.

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