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Variation in Cobb angle measurements in scoliosis.

Abstract
In order to determine the reliability of the Cobb angle measurement as it is used in the clinical management of scoliosis, a methodological survey was carried out. In the measurement of a Cobb angle two phases can be distinguished: (a) the production of a spinal radiograph and (b) the measurement of the angle itself. In respect of the first phase, the variation in production of the radiographs was calculated on Cobb angle measurements made by one investigator on serial radiographs of patients who underwent spinal fusion for scoliosis and therefore had a fixed spinal curvature. For the second phase, the accuracy of Cobb angle measurement was investigated by comparing measurements on the same radiographs of 46 scoliosis patients obtained by three investigators, namely two orthopaedic surgeons and an orthopaedic fellow who was assigned to a school screening project. Results were expressed as a Spearman correlation coefficient and a standard deviation of the differences. The Spearman correlation coefficient was 0.98 for the repeated radiographs (production variation) and also 0.98 for the repeated measurements on one radiograph (interobserver measurement variation). The standard deviation of the differences in Cobb angle for the repeated radiographs amounted to 3.2 degrees and for the repeated measurements on one radiograph it was 2.0 degrees. Although there is a good reproducibility of the Cobb angle measurement between different investigators, the variation in production of a spinal radiograph is an important source of error. This should be taken into account when making decisions in scoliosis management.
AuthorsJ E Pruijs, M A Hageman, W Keessen, R van der Meer, J C van Wieringen
JournalSkeletal radiology (Skeletal Radiol) Vol. 23 Issue 7 Pg. 517-20 (Oct 1994) ISSN: 0364-2348 [Print] Germany
PMID7824978 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Topics
  • Humans
  • Observer Variation
  • Radiography
  • Scoliosis (diagnostic imaging, pathology)
  • Spine (diagnostic imaging, pathology)

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