Interrater Reliability of Expert Electroencephalographers Identifying Seizures and Rhythmic and Periodic Patterns in Electroencephalograms
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Abstract
Background and Objectives: The validity of brain monitoring using electroencephalography (EEG), particularly to guide care in patients with acute or critical illness, requires that experts can reliably identify seizures and other potentially harmful rhythmic and periodic brain activity, collectively referred to as “ictal-interictal-injury continuum" (IIIC). Prior inter-rater reliability (IRR) studies are limited by small samples and selection bias. This study was conducted to assess the reliability of experts in identifying IIIC.
Methods: This prospective analysis included 30 experts with subspecialty clinical neurophysiology training from 18 institutions. Experts independently scored varying numbers of ten-second EEG segments as: “Seizure (SZ)”, “Lateralized Periodic Discharges (LPD)”, “Generalized Periodic Discharges (GPD)”, “Lateralized Rhythmic Delta Activity (LRDA)”, “Generalized Rhythmic Delta Activity (GRDA)”, or “Other”. EEGs were performed for clinical indications at Massachusetts General Hospital between 2006 to 2020. Primary outcome measures were pairwise IRR (average percent agreement (PA) between pairs of experts) and majority IRR (average PA with group consensus) for each class; and beyond chance agreement (κ). Secondary outcomes were calibration of expert scoring to group consensus, and latent trait analysis to investigate contributions of bias and noise to scoring variability.
Results: Among 2,711 EEGs, 49% were from females, and median (IQR) age was 55 (41). In total experts scored 50,697 EEG segments; the median [range] number scored by each expert was 6,287.5 [1,002, 45,267]. Overall pairwise IRR was moderate (PA 52%, κ 42%), and majority IRR was substantial (PA 65%, κ 61%). Noise-bias analysis demonstrated that a single underlying receiver operating curve can account for most variation in experts' false positive vs true positive characteristics (median [range] of variance explained (R2): 95 [93, 98]%), and for most variation in experts’ precision vs sensitivity characteristics (R2: 75 [59, 89]%). Thus, variation between experts is mostly attributable not to differences in expertise, but rather to variation in decision thresholds.
Discussion: Our results provide precise estimates of expert reliability from a large and diverse sample, and a parsimonious theory to explain the origin of disagreements between experts. The results also establish a standard for how well an automated IIIC classifier must perform to match experts.
Classification of Evidence: This study provides Class II evidence that independent expert review reliably identifies ictal-interictal injury continuum patterns on EEG compared to expert consensus.
- Received April 13, 2022.
- Accepted in final form October 25, 2022.
- © 2022 American Academy of Neurology
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