The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome: a pilot study

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The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome : a pilot study. / Schmidt, Nanna S.; Fana, Viktoria; Danielsen, Mads Ammitzbøll; Lindegaard, Hanne M.; Voss, Anne; Horn, Hans Christian; Knudsen, John B.; Byg, Keld Erik; Morillon, Melanie Birger; Just, Søren Andreas; Døhn, Uffe M.; Terslev, Lene.

I: Clinical Rheumatology, Bind 42, Nr. 12, 2023, s. 3275-3281.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schmidt, NS, Fana, V, Danielsen, MA, Lindegaard, HM, Voss, A, Horn, HC, Knudsen, JB, Byg, KE, Morillon, MB, Just, SA, Døhn, UM & Terslev, L 2023, 'The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome: a pilot study', Clinical Rheumatology, bind 42, nr. 12, s. 3275-3281. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4

APA

Schmidt, N. S., Fana, V., Danielsen, M. A., Lindegaard, H. M., Voss, A., Horn, H. C., Knudsen, J. B., Byg, K. E., Morillon, M. B., Just, S. A., Døhn, U. M., & Terslev, L. (2023). The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome: a pilot study. Clinical Rheumatology, 42(12), 3275-3281. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4

Vancouver

Schmidt NS, Fana V, Danielsen MA, Lindegaard HM, Voss A, Horn HC o.a. The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome: a pilot study. Clinical Rheumatology. 2023;42(12):3275-3281. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4

Author

Schmidt, Nanna S. ; Fana, Viktoria ; Danielsen, Mads Ammitzbøll ; Lindegaard, Hanne M. ; Voss, Anne ; Horn, Hans Christian ; Knudsen, John B. ; Byg, Keld Erik ; Morillon, Melanie Birger ; Just, Søren Andreas ; Døhn, Uffe M. ; Terslev, Lene. / The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome : a pilot study. I: Clinical Rheumatology. 2023 ; Bind 42, Nr. 12. s. 3275-3281.

Bibtex

@article{14b0f52a9f7a4abf89346d79e7767e93,
title = "The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sj{\"o}gren{\textquoteright}s syndrome: a pilot study",
abstract = "The objective of this pilot study was to assess the impact of a salivary gland ultrasound (SGUS) atlas for scoring parenchymal changes in Sj{\"o}gren{\textquoteright}s syndrome by assessing the reliability of the scoring system (0–3), without and with the use of the SGUS atlas. Ten participants with varying experience in SGUS contributed to the reliability exercise. Thirty SGUS images of the submandibular and parotid gland with abnormalities ranging from 0 to 3 were scored using the written definitions of the OMERACT SGUS scoring system and using the SGUS atlas based on the OMERACT scoring system. For intra-reader reliability, two rounds were performed without and with the atlas—in the 2nd round the 30 images were rearranged in random order by a physician not included in the scoring. Inter-reader reliability was also determined in both rounds. Without using the atlas, the SGUS OMERACT scoring system showed fair inter-reader reliability in round 1 (mean kappa 0.36; range 0.06–0.69) and moderate intra-reader reliability (mean kappa 0.55; range 0.28–0.81). With the atlas, inter-reader reliability improved in round 1 to moderate (mean kappa 0.52; range 0.31–0.77) and intra-reader reliability to good (mean kappa 0.69; range 0.46–0.86). Higher intra-reader reliability was noted in participants with previous SGUS experience. The SGUS atlas increased both intra- and inter-reader reliability for scoring gland pathology in participants with varying SGUS experience suggesting a possible future role in clinical practice and trials. Key Points • Ultrasonography can detect parenchymal changes in salivary glands in patients with Sj{\"o}gren{\textquoteright}s disease. • An ultrasound atlas may improve reliability of scoring parenchymal changes in salivary glands.",
keywords = "OMERACT, Reproducibility of results, Salivary glands, Sj{\"o}gren{\textquoteright}s syndrome, Ultrasonography",
author = "Schmidt, {Nanna S.} and Viktoria Fana and Danielsen, {Mads Ammitzb{\o}ll} and Lindegaard, {Hanne M.} and Anne Voss and Horn, {Hans Christian} and Knudsen, {John B.} and Byg, {Keld Erik} and Morillon, {Melanie Birger} and Just, {S{\o}ren Andreas} and D{\o}hn, {Uffe M.} and Lene Terslev",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4",
language = "English",
volume = "42",
pages = "3275--3281",
journal = "Clinical Rheumatology",
issn = "0770-3198",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The impact of an ultrasound atlas for scoring salivary glands in primary Sjögren’s syndrome

T2 - a pilot study

AU - Schmidt, Nanna S.

AU - Fana, Viktoria

AU - Danielsen, Mads Ammitzbøll

AU - Lindegaard, Hanne M.

AU - Voss, Anne

AU - Horn, Hans Christian

AU - Knudsen, John B.

AU - Byg, Keld Erik

AU - Morillon, Melanie Birger

AU - Just, Søren Andreas

AU - Døhn, Uffe M.

AU - Terslev, Lene

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The objective of this pilot study was to assess the impact of a salivary gland ultrasound (SGUS) atlas for scoring parenchymal changes in Sjögren’s syndrome by assessing the reliability of the scoring system (0–3), without and with the use of the SGUS atlas. Ten participants with varying experience in SGUS contributed to the reliability exercise. Thirty SGUS images of the submandibular and parotid gland with abnormalities ranging from 0 to 3 were scored using the written definitions of the OMERACT SGUS scoring system and using the SGUS atlas based on the OMERACT scoring system. For intra-reader reliability, two rounds were performed without and with the atlas—in the 2nd round the 30 images were rearranged in random order by a physician not included in the scoring. Inter-reader reliability was also determined in both rounds. Without using the atlas, the SGUS OMERACT scoring system showed fair inter-reader reliability in round 1 (mean kappa 0.36; range 0.06–0.69) and moderate intra-reader reliability (mean kappa 0.55; range 0.28–0.81). With the atlas, inter-reader reliability improved in round 1 to moderate (mean kappa 0.52; range 0.31–0.77) and intra-reader reliability to good (mean kappa 0.69; range 0.46–0.86). Higher intra-reader reliability was noted in participants with previous SGUS experience. The SGUS atlas increased both intra- and inter-reader reliability for scoring gland pathology in participants with varying SGUS experience suggesting a possible future role in clinical practice and trials. Key Points • Ultrasonography can detect parenchymal changes in salivary glands in patients with Sjögren’s disease. • An ultrasound atlas may improve reliability of scoring parenchymal changes in salivary glands.

AB - The objective of this pilot study was to assess the impact of a salivary gland ultrasound (SGUS) atlas for scoring parenchymal changes in Sjögren’s syndrome by assessing the reliability of the scoring system (0–3), without and with the use of the SGUS atlas. Ten participants with varying experience in SGUS contributed to the reliability exercise. Thirty SGUS images of the submandibular and parotid gland with abnormalities ranging from 0 to 3 were scored using the written definitions of the OMERACT SGUS scoring system and using the SGUS atlas based on the OMERACT scoring system. For intra-reader reliability, two rounds were performed without and with the atlas—in the 2nd round the 30 images were rearranged in random order by a physician not included in the scoring. Inter-reader reliability was also determined in both rounds. Without using the atlas, the SGUS OMERACT scoring system showed fair inter-reader reliability in round 1 (mean kappa 0.36; range 0.06–0.69) and moderate intra-reader reliability (mean kappa 0.55; range 0.28–0.81). With the atlas, inter-reader reliability improved in round 1 to moderate (mean kappa 0.52; range 0.31–0.77) and intra-reader reliability to good (mean kappa 0.69; range 0.46–0.86). Higher intra-reader reliability was noted in participants with previous SGUS experience. The SGUS atlas increased both intra- and inter-reader reliability for scoring gland pathology in participants with varying SGUS experience suggesting a possible future role in clinical practice and trials. Key Points • Ultrasonography can detect parenchymal changes in salivary glands in patients with Sjögren’s disease. • An ultrasound atlas may improve reliability of scoring parenchymal changes in salivary glands.

KW - OMERACT

KW - Reproducibility of results

KW - Salivary glands

KW - Sjögren’s syndrome

KW - Ultrasonography

U2 - 10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4

DO - 10.1007/s10067-023-06696-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37553551

AN - SCOPUS:85167364038

VL - 42

SP - 3275

EP - 3281

JO - Clinical Rheumatology

JF - Clinical Rheumatology

SN - 0770-3198

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 374553636