Lecture to ISCoS (International Spinal Cord Society Hellenic
Society Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation) Outcome
Measures, Athens, Greece – 26-29/09/2004
Accuracy of ASIA
Impairment Scale of Spinal Cord Injury Using the 2002
Standards
Linda Jones, PT, MS, Ralph J.
Marino, MD, Steven Kirshblum, MD, Joseph Tal, PhD
Background: Despite its
widespread use, the accuracy of the AIS (American Spinal
Injury Association Impairment Scale) classification of
spinal cord injury (SCI) using the 2002 International
Standards for Neurological Classification (the Standards)
has not been evaluated.
Methods: Eight physicians
attending an investigators meeting for the Proneuron Phase
II autologous incubated macrophage study for treatment of
SCI Patients participated in a study of AIS grade
reliability. Each physician determined AIS grade on 15
sample cases. For each of these cases, an expert analyst’s
AIS grade was used as the comparison standard.
Results: Overall Kappa for
agreement between physicians and the expert opinion was
0.685 (p < 0.001). Individual physician Kappas ranged
between 0.444 and 0.907. The overall proportion of correct
responses across physicians and cases was 77.5%. However,
accuracy varied by true patient grade: 97.5%, 66.7%, 67.5%,
68.7% for Grades A, B, C, and D respectively (p = 0.003).
Agreement for Grade A cases was higher than that for other
Grades (p < 0.05), which did not differ significantly among
themselves.
Conclusions: 1) The reliability
of the AIS, as measured by Kappa, is reasonable on average
but should be improved. 2) Reliability training should focus
on Grades B, C and D, as physicians already demonstrate high
accuracy in determining Grade A.
Supported by Proneuron Biotechnologies