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The influence of measurement location on reliability of quantitative nailfold videocapillaroscopy in patients with SSc

Murray, Andrea K; Vail, Andy; Moore, Tonia L; Manning, Joanne B; Taylor, Christopher J; Herrick, Ariane L

Rheumatology. 2012;51(7):1323-1330.

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Abstract

Objectives. Nailfold videocapillaroscopy is being increasingly used as a marker of SSc-related microvascular disease, including in response to treatment. However, it requires further validation. Our aim was to assess the inter-observer, intra-observer and test - retest variability of semi-automated measurement of capillary features as well as of a manual density measurement. Methods. All capillary apexes in images from 58 patients with SSc were marked up independently by two trained observers (inter-observer variability). The first observer then re-marked the images (intra-observer variability), and finally, the first observer marked up a second image of the same nailfold (test-retest). Mark-up of capillaries was carried out on cropped mosaic images (cropped independently by the observers to a fixed width, to allow the same length of nail bed to be studied for each patient) and on whole mosaic images (examining the whole nail bed). Results. Reproducibility of independently cropped mosaic images was poor and was due to the variation in the positioning of the cropped area. However, quantification of whole mosaic images was highly reproducible, e.g. for inter-capillary distance, the intra-class correlation coefficient for inter-observer, intra-observer and test-retest reliability was 0.95, 0.98 and 0.90 (compared with 0.88, 0.79 and 0.89 for cropped mosaic images), respectively. Intra-observer limits of agreement for whole mosaic images were better than inter-observer reproducibility. Conclusion. Quantitative assessment of SSc-related change in nailfold capillaries is unreliable if examination of the same set of capillaries cannot be guaranteed. Conversely a wide-field, high-magnification system that allows visualization of the whole nail bed offers a highly reproducible approach for quantitative assessment and therefore has potential as an outcome measure.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Published date:
Journal title:
ISSN:
Volume:
51
Issue:
7
Start page:
1323
End page:
1330
Total:
8
Pagination:
1323-1330
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1093/rheumatology/kes007
ISI Accession Number:
WOS:000305631500025
Related website(s):
  • Related website <Go to ISI>://WOS:000305631500025
General notes:
  • Times Cited: 0
Access state:
Active

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:179674
Created by:
Taylor, Christopher
Created:
17th October, 2012, 07:17:52
Last modified by:
Taylor, Christopher
Last modified:
17th October, 2012, 07:17:52

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