• World Neurosurg · Jul 2019

    Review

    Surgical Practice in Traumatic Spinal Fracture Treatment with Regard to the SLICS and TLICS Systems: A Review of 58 Patients at the University of Wisconsin.

    • Kimberly Hamilton, Darnell T Josiah, Mark Tierney, and Nathaniel Brooks.
    • Neurosurgery Department, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Madison, Wisconsin, USA. Electronic address: k.hamilton@neurosurgery.wisc.edu.
    • World Neurosurg. 2019 Jul 1; 127: e101-e107.

    ObjectivesSpine surgeons at a Level 1 Trauma Center have observed a high incidence of spine and spinal cord injuries owing to falls from tree stands. These injuries have been retrospectively reviewed in the context of the Thoracolumbar Injury Classification and Severity (TLICS) and the Subaxial Cervical Injury Classification and Severity (SLICS) classification systems to assess inter-user reliability and validity. We hypothesize that the inter-rater reliability will be similar between neuroradiology and neurosurgery raters and validity of the scoring system will be maintained at our institution.MethodsThe University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics' trauma database was reviewed for tree stand-related injuries from 1999 to 2013, with a focus on patients suffering from spine and spinal cord injuries. The TLICS and SLICS scores were then independently determined for these injuries by a neurosurgeon and a neuroradiologist.ResultsWhen cases were grouped by management recommendation (operative, equivocal, and nonoperative) reviewer agreement was 12/15 (80%) of SLICS and 38/52 (73%) of TLICS scores. Operative SLICS positive predictive value reached 100%, however, with a wide confidence interval. Conversely, the SLICS negative predictive value was poor at 54%-60%, with frequent operative treatment for patients assigned nonoperative scores. TLICS scores reached 77.8% and 93.3% positive predictive value per reviewer, whereas negative predictive values reached 93.9% and 89.2%, respectively.ConclusionsThe TLICS and SLICS systems provide good-to-excellent inter-rater reliability. SLICS validity was poor, whereas TLICS was reasonable for nonoperative cases and moderate for operative cases. Systems such as the TLICS and the SLICS may be best applied in the educational setting to confirm the fracture morphology and presence or absence of ligamentous injury between surgeons and radiologists.Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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