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KANDID–an EMG decision support system–evaluated in a European multicenter trial

Identifieur interne : 002365 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 002364; suivant : 002366

KANDID–an EMG decision support system–evaluated in a European multicenter trial

Auteurs : Minkyu Vingtoft ; Minkyu Fuglsang-Frederiksen ; Minkyu R Nager ; Minkyu Petrera ; Minkyu Stigsby ; Minkyu Willison ; Minkyu Jarratt ; Peter R. W. Fawcett ; Peter R. W. Schofield ; Peter R. W. Otte ; Peter R. W. Sieben ; Peter R. W. Vila

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:CDEFF8D695748CA16D9521333C950938FBB757E5

Abstract

KANDID is an advanced EMG decision support system dedicated to the support of the clinical neurophysiologist during EMG examinations. It has facilities for test planning, automatized and structured data interpretation, EMG diagnosis, explanation, and reporting. In a prospective European multicenter field trial, the agreement levels between clinical neurophysiologists and KANDID's diagnostic statements were measured under ordinary clinical EMG practice. KANDID was assessed in 159 individual patient EMG examinations by nine clinical neurophysiologists at seven different EMG laboratories. The reasoning of KANDID was considered understandable for the examiners in 80–90% of cases. The agreement level for the electrophysiological states of muscles and nerves between KANDID and the individual examiners was, on average, 81%. The corresponding diagnostic agreement with KANDID was, on average, 61%. A pronounced interexaminer variation in the agreement level related to the different EMG centers was observed. All Danish and Belgian examiners agreed with KANDID in more than 50% of their cases with regard to the EMG diagnosis, while the English examiners were in agreement with KANDID in 50% or less of their cases. These differences were possibly due to differences in epidemiology, examination techniques, control material, and examination planning strategies. It is concluded that it is possible to transfer systems like KANDID out of their development sites and apply them successfully if they can be locally customized by the clinical end users via editors. © 1993 John Wiley & Soncs, Inc.

Url:
DOI: 10.1002/mus.880160514

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:CDEFF8D695748CA16D9521333C950938FBB757E5

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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">KANDID is an advanced EMG decision support system dedicated to the support of the clinical neurophysiologist during EMG examinations. It has facilities for test planning, automatized and structured data interpretation, EMG diagnosis, explanation, and reporting. In a prospective European multicenter field trial, the agreement levels between clinical neurophysiologists and KANDID's diagnostic statements were measured under ordinary clinical EMG practice. KANDID was assessed in 159 individual patient EMG examinations by nine clinical neurophysiologists at seven different EMG laboratories. The reasoning of KANDID was considered understandable for the examiners in 80–90% of cases. The agreement level for the electrophysiological states of muscles and nerves between KANDID and the individual examiners was, on average, 81%. The corresponding diagnostic agreement with KANDID was, on average, 61%. A pronounced interexaminer variation in the agreement level related to the different EMG centers was observed. All Danish and Belgian examiners agreed with KANDID in more than 50% of their cases with regard to the EMG diagnosis, while the English examiners were in agreement with KANDID in 50% or less of their cases. These differences were possibly due to differences in epidemiology, examination techniques, control material, and examination planning strategies. It is concluded that it is possible to transfer systems like KANDID out of their development sites and apply them successfully if they can be locally customized by the clinical end users via editors. © 1993 John Wiley & Soncs, Inc.</div>
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