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Inter-observer differences in interpretation of coronary pressure-wire pullback data by non-expert interventional cardiologists

  • Takayuki Warisawa
  • , James P. Howard
  • , Christopher M. Cook
  • , Yousif Ahmad
  • , Shunichi Doi
  • , Masafumi Nakayama
  • , Sonoka Goto
  • , Yohei Yakuta
  • , Kenichi Karube
  • , Fumiyasu Seike
  • , Teruyoshi Uetani
  • , Tadashi Murai
  • , Yuetsu Kikuta
  • , Yasutsugu Shiono
  • , Yoshiaki Kawase
  • , Matthew J. Shun-Shin
  • , Toshiki Kaihara
  • , Takumi Higuma
  • , Yuki Ishibashi
  • , Hisao Matsuda
  • Hidetaka Nishina, Hitoshi Matsuo, Javier Escaned, Yoshihiro J. Akashi, Justin E. Davies

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

The physiological pattern of coronary artery disease as determined by pressure-wire (PW)-pullback is important for decision-making of revascularization and risk stratification of patients. However, it remains unclear whether inter-observer differences in interpreting PW-pullback data are subject to the expertise of physicians. This study sought to investigate the subjectivity of this assessment among non-experts. Expert interventional cardiologists classified 545 PW-pullback traces into physiologically focal or physiologically diffuse disease pattern. Defining expert-consensus as the reference standard, we evaluated ten non-expert doctors’ classification performance. Observers were stratified equally by two ways: (i) years of experience as interventional cardiologists (middle-level vs. junior-level) and (ii) volume of institutions where they belonged to (high-volume center vs. low-volume center). When judged against the expert-consensus, the agreement of non-expert observers in assessing physiological pattern of disease (focal or diffuse) ranged from 69.1 to 85.0% (p for heterogeneity < 0.0001). There was no evidence for a moderating effect of years of experience; the pooled accuracy of middle-level doctors was 78.8% (95% confidential interval [CI] 72.8–84.7%) vs. 79.1% for junior-level doctors (95% CI 75.9–82.2%, p = 0.95 for difference). On the other hand, we observed a significant moderating effect of center volume. Accuracy across non-experts in high-volume centers was 82.7% (95% CI 80.3–85.1%) vs. 75.1% for low-volume centers (95% CI 71.9–78.3%, p = 0.0002 for difference). Interpretation of PW-pullback by non-expert interventional cardiologists was considerably subjective.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)289-297
Number of pages9
JournalCardiovascular intervention and therapeutics
Volume36
Issue number3
Early online date2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2021

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Instantaneous wave-free ratio
  • Physiological pattern of disease
  • Pressure-wire pullback

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