Foot & Ankle Orthopaedics (Sep 2020)

Validation of 9-Grid Scheme for Localizing Osteochondral Lesions of the Talus

  • Kevin D. Martin DO, FAAOS,
  • Trevor J. McBride BS,
  • Dylan P. Horan BA,
  • Amgad Haleem MD, PhD,
  • Jeannie Huh MD,
  • Adam Groth MD,
  • Laura K. Dawson DO

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2473011420944925
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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Background: A 9-grid scheme has been integrated into the foot and ankle literature to help clinicians and researchers localize osteochondral lesions of the talus (OLTs). We hypothesized that fellowship-trained orthopedic foot and ankle surgeons would have a high rate of intra/inter-observer reliability when localizing OLTs, therefore validating the scheme. Methods: We queried our institution’s foot and ankle radiographic database for magnetic resonance images with OLTs. Each MRI was reviewed by the senior author, and 2 key images (widest OLT diameter) from each tangential view were copied and combined onto one slide. Fifty consecutive deidentified images of ankles were then sent to 4 practicing fellowship-trained foot and ankle surgeons. Each was asked to identify which zone the OLT was localized within. A radiologist’s report served as the control. Statistical analyses were performed using Cohen and Fleiss kappa tests. Results: The reviewers demonstrated majority consensus on 45/50 images with substantial agreement for zones 4 and 6. The interobserver reliability was moderate with a κ = 0.55. The mean intraobserver reliability was substantial, with a κ = 0.79. A musculoskeletal radiologist determined there were 3 lesions in zone 7, 18 lesions in zone 4, and 29 lesions in zone 6. Conclusion: This study is the first to critically evaluate the 9-grid scheme and its reliability among orthopedic foot and ankle surgeons. Our study found that the 9-grid scheme is an accurate method of localization for OLTs with high intra- and moderate interobserver reliability between surgeons. Level of Evidence: Level IV, retrospective diagnostic study.