Accuracy and Interobserver Variation in the Interpretation of Computed Tomography in Solitary Brain Lesions
- 1 May 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 47 (5) , 520-523
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1990.00530050036009
Abstract
• The clinical data and computed tomographic findings of 64 patients with solitary supratentorial brain lesions were presented to two panels of six experienced clinicians. The diagnoses predicted by these clinicians were compared with each other (interobserver variation) and with the definite diagnosis, which in almost all cases was based on histologic examination of the involved tissue (validity of predicted diagnosis). The interobserver agreement was only moderate. The predicted diagnoses agreed with the definite diagnoses in only 57% of cases. A high number of errors were made in distinguishing between high-grade and low-grade glioma and between high-grade glioma and cerebral metastasis, and in the detection of primary cerebral lymphoma. Possible implications of these findings for clinical practice are discussed.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Computed tomography in the diagnosis of malignant brain tumours: do all patients require biopsy?Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1989
- Absence of contrast enhancement on CT brain scans of patients with supratentorial malignant gliomasNeurology, 1988
- Grading of oligodendrogliomasCancer, 1983
- Measuring pairwise interobserver agreement when all subjects are judged by the same observersStatistica Neerlandica, 1982
- Prognostic significance of contrast enhancement in low-grade astrocytomas of the adult cerebrum.Radiology, 1981
- Computed tomography of supratentorial astrocytomaClinical Neurology and Neurosurgery, 1978
- The Measurement of Observer Agreement for Categorical DataPublished by JSTOR ,1977
- The Radiological Management of Cerebral TumoursPublished by Springer Nature ,1977
- AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ACCURACY OF COMPUTERIZED TRANSVERSE AXIAL SCANNING (EMI SCANNER) IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF INTRACRANIAL TUMOURBrain, 1975
- Measuring nominal scale agreement among many raters.Psychological Bulletin, 1971