Preliminary evaluation of a scheme for grading the gross morphology of the human intervertebral disc

JP Thompson, RH Pearce, MT Schechter, ME Adams… - Spine, 1990 - journals.lww.com
JP Thompson, RH Pearce, MT Schechter, ME Adams, IKY Tsang, PB Bishop
Spine, 1990journals.lww.com
A five-category grading scheme for assessing the gross morphology of midsagittal sections
of the human lumbar intervertebral disc was developed. The ability of three observers to
categorize a series of 68 discs with a wide spectrum of morphologies established the
comprehensiveness of the classification. Three independent observers tested the
reproducibility of the procedure by assignment of grades blindly to duplicate images of 68
discs taken from 15 spines. The intraobserver agreement ranged from 87 to 91%. The …
Abstract
A five-category grading scheme for assessing the gross morphology of midsagittal sections of the human lumbar intervertebral disc was developed. The ability of three observers to categorize a series of 68 discs with a wide spectrum of morphologies established the comprehensiveness of the classification. Three independent observers tested the reproducibility of the procedure by assignment of grades blindly to duplicate images of 68 discs taken from 15 spines. The intraobserver agreement ranged from 87 to 91%. The interobserver agreement was 61, 64, and 88% for the three pairs, the two low values being attributable to the bias of one observer. The agreement between the assigned and average grades was 85, 92, 68, 90, and 75% for Grades I through V, respectively. Except for Grade III, the disagreements were attributable mainly to the bias of one observer. Both the increase in the grade with age and the finding that all the discs within 14 of 15 spines had a narrow range of grades demonstrated the biologic credibility of the scheme.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins