Diagnostic outcome and observer performance in sagittal tomography of the temporomandibular joint.

Abstract
The diagnostic outcome and observer performance of sagittal tomography in detecting degenerative lesions of the temporomandibular joint was studied. Thirty tomograms depicting findings such as cyst, erosion, osteophyte and sclerosis and 30 with a normal appearance were selected. The joint status was verified histologically. Four observers evaluated the tomograms with the aid of reference tomograms, independent of the microscopic examination. The diagnostic accuracy was high (80-87%). The sensitivity was between 67% and 90% and the specificity between 73% and 93%. An osteophyte was, with few exceptions, a true finding whereas sclerosis most frequently was false. About two-thirds of the reports of cyst and erosion were found to be true. The interobserver overall agreement rates for any two observers varied between 68% and 90%, for three observers between 65% and 82%, and for all four observers was 63%. The Kappa value for any two observers was 0.40-0.80, indicating fair to substantial agreement. The intra-observer agreement was only somewhat higher than the interobserver. This study shows that, with the aid of reference tomograms, high diagnostic accuracy and observer agreement can be achieved in sagittal tomography.