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Agreement Between Physician Evaluation and the Composite Response Index in Diffuse Cutaneous Systemic Sclerosis

Canadian Scleroderma Research Group, Boyang Zheng, Mianbo Wang, Kerry McKenna, Lee Shapiro, Richard Silver, Mary Ellen Csuka, Frank van den Hoogen, David Robinson, John D Pauling, Laura Hummers, Thomas Krieg, Francesco Del Galdo, Robert Spiera, Niall Jones, Nader Khalidi, Alessandra Vacca, Jeska K de Vries-Bouwstra, Jessica Gordon, Murray Baron*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective:
Diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a highly heterogeneous disease. A provisionally approved Composite Response Index in diffuse cutaneous SSc (CRISS) was developed as a 1-year outcome measure for clinical trials. Our goal was to further validate the CRISS by examining agreement between CRISS definitions for improved/non-improved with physicians' evaluation of disease.

Methods:
Patient profiles from a large observational cohort were created for 50 random diffuse cutaneous SSc patients of <5 years disease duration with improved CRISS scores after 1 year and 50 with non-improved CRISS scores. Profiles described disease features used during the initial CRISS development at baseline and at 1 year. Each profile was independently rated by 3 expert physicians. Majority opinion determined whether a patient was improved or not improved, and kappa agreement with the CRISS cutoff of 0.6 was calculated.

Results:
Patients had mean ± SD disease duration of 2.2 ± 1.3 years. There was substantial agreement between the physician majority opinion about each case and the CRISS (κ = 0.76 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.64–0.88]). The agreement between each individual physician opinion and the CRISS was also substantial (κ = 0.70 [95% CI 0.62–0.78]). All CRISS non-improvers were also rated as non-improved by physician majority; however, 12 CRISS improvers were rated as non-improved by physicians.

Conclusion:
There was substantial agreement between the dichotomous CRISS rating and physician assessment of diffuse cutaneous SSc patients after 1 year. This supports the use of a CRISS cutoff at 0.6 for improvement versus non-improvement, although the CRISS tended to rate more patients as improved than did physicians.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1806-1812
Number of pages7
JournalArthritis Care and Research
Volume74
Issue number11
Early online date10 May 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American College of Rheumatology.

Keywords

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Observer Variation
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Scleroderma, Diffuse/diagnosis
  • Severity of Illness Index

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