Classification of Osteonecrosis of the Femoral Head

Abstract
The purpose of the current investigation was to determine interobserver and intraobserver reliability of the classification system of Steinberg et al for osteonecrosis of the femoral head. Sixty-five anteroposterior and lateral radiographs of hips were selected randomly from a pool of patients with confirmed osteonecrosis of the femoral head. Six fellowship-trained observers viewed the radiographs (Reading 1). The observers used six main stages of the classification excluding A, B, and C subgroups. The same observers viewed the radiographs 4 months later in reverse order (Reading 2). Reading 1 was used to calculate interobserver kappa values. Reading 2 was used to calculate intraobserver kappa values. Stage-specific kappa values for interobserver variation between all viewers were as follows: Stage I, k = 0.64; Stage II, k = 0.51; Stage III, k = 0.21; Stage IV, k = 0.49; Stage V, k = 0.36; and Stage VI, k = 0.80. Stage-specific kappa values for intraobserver variation between all viewers were as follows: Stage I, k = 0.74; Stage II, k = 0.60; Stage III, k = 0.46; Stage IV, k = 0.59; Stage V, k = 0.27; and Stage VI, k = 0.78. An average of 10 of 21 (48%) of these errors involved Stage III. An average of 6.3 of 21 (30%) intraobserver errors involved Stage V. The presence of the crescent sign in Stage III and joint space narrowing in Stage V markedly diminished the overall reliability of any four-to six-stage classification system. Based on the authors’ experience and analysis of the current classifications of osteonecrosis of the femoral head, an easy and reproducible Pittsburgh classification system is proposed.

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