Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The objective of this investigation was to evaluate the interobserver agreement between different investigators on selected cardiotocogram (CTG) parameters. METHODS: Medical records were selected from birth histories of cephalic deliveries with meconium-stained amniotic fluid. A total of 84 CTGs were recorded and analyzed by six clinicians. Agreement metrics such as proportion of agreement (Pa) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) and reliability indices calculated via the Fleiss kappa statistic, were employed to quantify interobserver consistency. RESULTS: CTG parameters baseline rate, variability, presence or absence of decelerations, and total time of decelerations demonstrated good or moderate interobserver agreement, kappa ranged 0.47-0.80, indicating fairly high consistency in estimating these parameters. The kappa coefficients for these features ranged from moderate to very good levels. The assessment of accelerations exhibited only weak to moderate concordance (kappa: 0.29-0.47). Evaluation of the deceleration type yielded the lowest agreement. The overall categorization of CTGs into categories exhibited only poor to moderate interobserver concordance (Fleiss kappa: 0.19-0.44). CONCLUSIONS: CTG parameters - baseline rate, variability, presence/absence of decelerations, and total width of decelerations in a 30-minute CTG interval - are features that can be interpreted with a high degree of objectivity and agreement with appropriate training, even without clinical experience. Since the categorization of CTGs into separate categories (normal, suspicious, and pathological) has a poor to moderate level of agreement, it indicates a need for discussion on whether it is worth continuing to rely on such CTG categorical stratification or base CTG judgements on more objective and high agreement parameters.