Validation of the AOSpine-DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification - Effect of Surgical Experience, Surgical Specialty, Work-Setting and Trauma Center Level on Reliability and Reproducibility.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
March 24, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Scherer, Julian | |
Camino-Willhuber, Gaston | |
Spiegl, Ulrich | |
Joaquim, Andrei Fernandes | |
Chhabra, Harvinder Singh | |
Dvorak, Marcel | |
Schroeder, Gregory | |
El-Sharkawi, Mohammad | |
Bransford, Richard | |
Schnake, Klaus John |
Subject(s)
Series
Global Spine Journal
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2192-5682
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40125826
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Study DesignCross-sectional survey.ObjectivesA cornerstone of classification systems is good reliability amongst different groups of classification users. Thus, the aim of this international validation study was to assess the reliability of the new AO Spine DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification (OF classification) stratified by surgical specialty, work-setting, work-experience, and trauma center level.Methods320 spine surgeons were asked to rate 27 cases according to the OF classification at 2 time points, 4 weeks apart (assessment 1 and 2) in this online-webinar based validation process. The kappa statistic (κ) was calculated to assess the inter-observer reliability and the intra-rater reproducibility.ResultsA total of 7798 (90.3%) ratings were recorded in assessment 1 and 6621 (76.6%) ratings in assessment 2. Global inter-rater reliability was moderate in both assessments (κ = 0.57; κ = 0.58). Participants with a work-experience of >20 years showed the highest inter-rater agreement in both assessments globally (κ = 0.65; κ = 0.67). Participants from a level-1 trauma center showed the highest agreement (κ = 0.58), whereas participants working at a tertiary trauma center showed higher grade of agreement in the second assessment (κ = 0.66). Participants working in academia showed the highest agreement in assessment 2 (κ = 0.6). Surgeons with academic background and surgeons employed by a hospital showed substantial intra-rater agreement in the second assessment.ConclusionsThe AO Spine-DGOU Osteoporotic Fracture Classification showed moderate to substantial inter-rater agreement as well as intra-rater reproducibility regardless of work-setting, surgical experience, level of trauma center and surgical specialty.
File(s)
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scherer-et-al-2025-validation-of-the-aospine-dgou-osteoporotic-fracture-classification-effect-of-surgical-experience.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 954.72 KB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |