Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.

AIMS: To compare agreement level and identify reasons for disagreement between grading of mydriatic digital photographs in a diabetic retinopathy screening service and hospital eye service biomicroscopy grading. METHODS: Structured examination findings leading to automatically calculated National S...

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Main Authors: Sallam, A, Scanlon, P, Stratton, I, Jones, V, Martin, C, Brelen, M, Johnston, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2011
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author Sallam, A
Scanlon, P
Stratton, I
Jones, V
Martin, C
Brelen, M
Johnston, R
author_facet Sallam, A
Scanlon, P
Stratton, I
Jones, V
Martin, C
Brelen, M
Johnston, R
author_sort Sallam, A
collection OXFORD
description AIMS: To compare agreement level and identify reasons for disagreement between grading of mydriatic digital photographs in a diabetic retinopathy screening service and hospital eye service biomicroscopy grading. METHODS: Structured examination findings leading to automatically calculated National Screening Committee grades recorded on an electronic medical record system in the hospital eye service at the first clinic visit after diabetic retinopathy screening service referral between April 2006 and November 2007 were retrospectively compared with the grade at the screening visit that prompted referral. In cases of disagreement, screening images were reviewed. RESULTS: Data on 452 eyes (226 patients) were analysed. For retinopathy, hospital eye service slit-lamp biomicroscopy grades were: R0 (no diabetic retinopathy) in 63 eyes; R1 (background retinopathy) in 251 eyes; R2 (pre-proliferative) in 129 eyes and R3 (proliferative) in nine eyes. Diabetic retinopathy screening service grades were in agreement in 350 eyes (77.4%), showed a lower grade in 59 eyes and a higher grade in 43. Agreement was moderate (κ=0.60). The most common reason for disagreement was overgrading of R1 by clinicians. Hospital eye service biomicroscopy maculopathy grades were: M0 (no maculopathy) in 366 eyes and M1 (maculopathy) in 86 eyes. Diabetic retinopathy screening service grades were in agreement in 327 eyes (72.3%), showed a lower grading in five eyes and a higher grade in 120 eyes. Agreement was moderate (κ=0.41). The commonest cause for disagreement was clinicians failing to identify fine macular exudates. CONCLUSIONS: This study of routine clinical services demonstrates moderate agreement between non-medical grading of mydriatic digital retinal photography images and hospital slit-lamp biomicroscopy grading of patients referred with diabetic retinopathy. The majority of errors in grading were attributable to errors by hospital doctors, usually in the direction of under-grading which could be a potential source of clinical risk if treatment is delayed.
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spelling oxford-uuid:70f0a0e3-ac75-4618-a5b1-840ac773f0df2022-03-26T19:40:34ZAgreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:70f0a0e3-ac75-4618-a5b1-840ac773f0dfEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Sallam, AScanlon, PStratton, IJones, VMartin, CBrelen, MJohnston, R AIMS: To compare agreement level and identify reasons for disagreement between grading of mydriatic digital photographs in a diabetic retinopathy screening service and hospital eye service biomicroscopy grading. METHODS: Structured examination findings leading to automatically calculated National Screening Committee grades recorded on an electronic medical record system in the hospital eye service at the first clinic visit after diabetic retinopathy screening service referral between April 2006 and November 2007 were retrospectively compared with the grade at the screening visit that prompted referral. In cases of disagreement, screening images were reviewed. RESULTS: Data on 452 eyes (226 patients) were analysed. For retinopathy, hospital eye service slit-lamp biomicroscopy grades were: R0 (no diabetic retinopathy) in 63 eyes; R1 (background retinopathy) in 251 eyes; R2 (pre-proliferative) in 129 eyes and R3 (proliferative) in nine eyes. Diabetic retinopathy screening service grades were in agreement in 350 eyes (77.4%), showed a lower grade in 59 eyes and a higher grade in 43. Agreement was moderate (κ=0.60). The most common reason for disagreement was overgrading of R1 by clinicians. Hospital eye service biomicroscopy maculopathy grades were: M0 (no maculopathy) in 366 eyes and M1 (maculopathy) in 86 eyes. Diabetic retinopathy screening service grades were in agreement in 327 eyes (72.3%), showed a lower grading in five eyes and a higher grade in 120 eyes. Agreement was moderate (κ=0.41). The commonest cause for disagreement was clinicians failing to identify fine macular exudates. CONCLUSIONS: This study of routine clinical services demonstrates moderate agreement between non-medical grading of mydriatic digital retinal photography images and hospital slit-lamp biomicroscopy grading of patients referred with diabetic retinopathy. The majority of errors in grading were attributable to errors by hospital doctors, usually in the direction of under-grading which could be a potential source of clinical risk if treatment is delayed.
spellingShingle Sallam, A
Scanlon, P
Stratton, I
Jones, V
Martin, C
Brelen, M
Johnston, R
Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title_full Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title_fullStr Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title_full_unstemmed Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title_short Agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy.
title_sort agreement and reasons for disagreement between photographic and hospital biomicroscopy grading of diabetic retinopathy
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