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Anatomical landmark position--can we trust what we see? Results from an online reliability and validity study of osteopaths

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Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment

Man Ther. 2014 Apr;19(2):158-64.

Authors:

Elise Pattyn, Dévan Rajendran

Abstract.



Background: Practitioners traditionally use observation to classify the position of patients' anatomical landmarks. This information may contribute to diagnosis and patient management.

Objectives: To calculate a) Inter-rater reliability of categorising the sagittal plane position of four anatomical landmarks (lateral femoral epicondyle, greater trochanter, mastoid process and acromion) on side-view photographs (with landmarks highlighted and not-highlighted) of anonymised subjects; b) Intra-rater reliability; c) Individual landmark inter-rater reliability; d) Validity against a 'gold standard' photograph.

Design: Online inter- and intra-rater reliability study.

Subjects: Photographed subjects: convenience sample of asymptomatic students; raters: randomly selected UK registered osteopaths.

Methods: 40 photographs of 30 subjects were used, a priori clinically acceptable reliability was ≥0.4. Inter-rater arm: 20 photographs without landmark highlights plus 10 with highlights; Intra-rater arm: 10 duplicate photographs (non-highlighted landmarks). Validity arm: highlighted landmark scores versus 'gold standard' photographs with vertical line. Research ethics approval obtained.

Raters: Osteopaths (n = 48) categorised landmark position relative to imagined vertical-line; Gwet's Agreement Coefficient 1 (AC1) calculated and chance-corrected coefficient benchmarked against Landis and Koch's scale; Validity calculation used Kendall's tau-B.

Results: Inter-rater reliability was 'fair' (AC1 = 0.342; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.279-0.404) for non-highlighted landmarks and 'moderate' (AC1 = 0.700; 95% CI = 0.596-0.805) for highlighted landmarks. Intra-rater reliability was 'fair' (AC1 = 0.522); range was 'poor' (AC1 = 0.160) to 'substantial' (AC1 = 0.896). No differences were found between individual landmarks. Validity was 'low' (TB = 0.327; p = 0.104).

Conclusion: Both inter- and intra-rater reliability was 'fair' but below clinically acceptable levels, validity was 'low'. Together these results challenge the clinical practice of using observation to categorise anterio-posterior landmark position.

Publication Date: 

2014 Apr

OEID: 

2431

Pattyn, E., Rajendran, D. (2014) 'Anatomical landmark position--can we trust what we see? Results from an online reliability and validity study of osteopaths ', Man Ther. 2014 Apr;19(2):158-64.

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