Reliability of the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) among radiation oncologists: an assessment of instability secondary to spinal metastases

CG Fisher, R Schouten, AL Versteeg, S Boriani… - Radiation …, 2014 - Springer
CG Fisher, R Schouten, AL Versteeg, S Boriani, PP Varga, LD Rhines, N Kawahara…
Radiation Oncology, 2014Springer
Abstract Background The Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) categorizes tumor
related spinal instability. It has the potential to streamline the referral of patients with
established or potential spinal instability to a spine surgeon. This study aims to define the
inter-and intra-observer reliability and validity of SINS among radiation oncologists. Methods
Thirty-three radiation oncologists, across ten international sites, rated 30 neoplastic spinal
disease cases. For each case, the total SINS (0-18 points), three clinical categories (stable …
Background
The Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) categorizes tumor related spinal instability. It has the potential to streamline the referral of patients with established or potential spinal instability to a spine surgeon. This study aims to define the inter- and intra-observer reliability and validity of SINS among radiation oncologists.
Methods
Thirty-three radiation oncologists, across ten international sites, rated 30 neoplastic spinal disease cases. For each case, the total SINS (0-18 points), three clinical categories (stable: 0-6 points, potentially unstable: 7-12 points, and unstable: 13-18 points), and a binary scale (‘stable’: 0-6 points and ‘current or possible instability’; surgical consultation recommended: 7-18 points) were recorded. Evaluation was repeated 6-8 weeks later. Inter-observer agreement and intra-observer reproducibility were calculated by means of the kappa statistic and translated into levels of agreement (slight, fair, moderate, substantial, and excellent). Validity was determined by comparing the ratings against a spinal surgeon’s consensus standard.
Results
Radiation oncologists demonstrated substantial (κ = 0.76) inter-observer and excellent (κ = 0.80) intra-observer reliability when using the SINS binary scale (‘stable’ versus ‘current or possible instability’). Validity of the binary scale was also excellent (κ = 0.85) compared with the gold standard. None of the unstable cases was rated as stable by the radiation oncologists ensuring all were appropriately recommended for surgical consultation.
Conclusions
Among radiation oncologists SINS is a highly reliable, reproducible, and valid assessment tool to address a key question in tumor related spinal disease: Is the spine ‘stable’ or is there ‘current or possible instability’ that warrants surgical assessment?
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