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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Interobserver variability of radiographic pulmonary nodule diameter measurements in dogs and cats.

Journal:
Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association
Year:
2014
Authors:
Williams, Jackie M et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences

Plain-English summary

This study looked at how different veterinarians measure the size of lung nodules in dogs and cats using X-rays. Researchers measured 47 nodules from 22 dogs and 7 cats, with eight different veterinarians of varying experience levels taking the measurements. They found that the size measurements could differ by about 16% between different vets, but this difference is not likely to affect treatment decisions or how we assess whether a nodule is growing or responding to treatment. Overall, while there is some variation in measurements, it is not considered a major issue in clinical practice.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the interobserver variability of radiographic pulmonary nodule diameter measurements among readers with varying levels of experience. Because interobserver variability may lead to inaccurate estimations of nodule growth on repeat radiographic assessment, an incorrect presumption of malignant etiology or misclassification of tumor response to treatment may result. The maximum diameters of 47 pulmonary nodules from 22 dogs and 7 cats were measured. Measurements were performed using one digital thoracic radiographic projection by eight clinicians. The eight clinicians included two interns, two residents, two board-certified veterinary specialists, and two board-certified veterinary radiologists. A mixed-effect analysis of variance model was used to evaluate the contribution of reader, experience level, patient, nodule, and nodule size to the overall variability in mean pulmonary nodule diameter. The interobserver variability in diameter measurement for any given nodule was 16%, and experience level and nodule size classification did not contribute to measurement variability. Linear measurements of the diameter of a pulmonary nodule can vary significantly among a group of clinicians; however, depending on the criteria used to evaluate nodule growth or tumor response, the 16% interobserver variability reported here is likely not clinically significant.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24446396/