Reliability of the preliminary omeract juvenile idiopathic arthritis mri score (Omeract jamris‐sij)

Tarimobo M. Otobo, Nele Herregods, Jacob L. Jaremko, Iwona Sudol‐szopinska, Walter P. Maksymowych, Arthur B. Meyers, Pamela Weiss, Shirley Tse, Joel Paschke, Rahim Moineddin, Nigil Haroon, Nikolay Tzaribachev, Simone Appenzeller, Olympia Papakonstantinou, Eva Kirkhus, Marion A. J. van Rossum, John Carrino, Philip G. Conaghan, Mirkamal Tolend, Jennifer StimecLennart Jans, Robert G. Lambert, Dax Rumsey, Andrea S. Doria

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Abstract

This study reports the reliability of the juvenile idiopathic arthritis magnetic resonance imaging scoring system (JAMRIS‐SIJ). The study comprised of eight raters—two rheumatologists and six radiologists—and 30 coronal T1 and Short‐Tau Inversion Recovery (STIR) MRI scans of patients with enthesitis‐related juvenile spondylarthritis. The median age of patients was 15 years with a mean disease duration of 5 years and 22 (73.3%) of the sample were boys. The inter‐rater agreement of scores for each of the JAMRIS‐SIJ items was calculated using a two‐way random effect, absolute agreement, and single rater intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC 2.1). The ICC was interpreted together with kurtosis, since the ICC is also affected by the distribution of scores in the sample. The eight‐rater, single measure inter‐rater ICC (and kurtosis) values for JAMRIS‐SIJ inflammation and damage components were the following: bone marrow edema (BME), 0.76 (1.2); joint space inflammation, 0.60 (1.8); capsulitis, 0.58 (9.2); enthesitis, 0.20 (0.1); ankylosis, 0.89 (35); sclerosis, 0.53 (4.6); erosion, 0.50 (6.5); fat lesion, 0.40 (21); backfill, 0.38 (38). The inter‐rater reliability for BME and ankylosis scores was good and met the a priori set ICC threshold, whereas for the other items it was variable and below the selected threshold. Future directives should focus on refinement of the scores, definitions, and methods of interpretation prior to validation of the JAMRIS‐SIJ through the assessment of its measurement properties.
Original languageEnglish
Article number4564
JournalJournal of clinical medicine
Volume10
Issue number19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2021

Keywords

  • JIA
  • MRI
  • Measurement instrument
  • OMERACT
  • Outcome measure
  • Reliability
  • SIJ

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